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Detecting Geomorphic Change and Stream Channel Evolution on the Sandy River, Oregon, Using Lidar Following Dam Removal in 2007Anthony, Lowell Henry 06 March 2019 (has links)
Following the removal of Marmot Dam on the Sandy River, Oregon, several Lidar flights were flown over the area of the former reservoir. The resultant sequential DEMs permitted calculation of reach-scale volumetric erosion and aggradation following dam removal. This allows for change detection across the entire affected reach of the former impoundment rather than just at several cross sections. In the first year there was a net loss of blank sediment in the dewatered reach. Subsequent flights show continued degradation of 145,649 m3 as well as aggradation of 6,232 m3. Sediment transport reached quasi-equilibrium in 2012 with a net change of 65 m3. In addition, this technique allows the extraction of cross-section information which shows that the channel continues to be actively migrating in some areas while also being constrained by bedrock features from past volcanism in some reaches. This study further shows the capability of lidar to measure rates of aggradation and degradation for an entire river system instead of reach specific extrapolations and that repeat lidar flights can more than adequately assess the changing nature of entire stream reaches more rapidly and more cost effectively than traditional field techniques. In addition: The utility of Lidar to do river management with repeat returns, having successive lidar acquisitions run on the watershed level will help us to gain insight into the correlation to precipitation events and geomorphological change in a given reach. Lidar can be used to assess the validity of channel evolution models. Sequential runs of lidar can be used to adjust the overall effectiveness of current CEM's and create new ones that consider reach specific geomorphology. Dam removal projects should incorporate initial lidar flights prior to removal and follow acquisitions based on known CEM's for the region and overall region-specific physiography. Sequential lidar should be used for hazard mitigation and geohazards analysis with an acquisition timeframe that is appropriate for the region's physiography, geology, geomorphology and the return interval of the hazard being monitored.
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Reservoir Evolution Following the Removal of Marmot Dam on the Sandy River, OregonKeith, Mackenzie Karli 01 January 2012 (has links)
The October 2007 removal of Marmot Dam, a 14.3-m-tall dam on the Sandy River in northwestern Oregon storing approximately 730,000 m3 of impounded sediment, provided an opportunity to study short- and long-term geomorphic effects of dam removal. Monitoring reservoir morphology during the two years following dam decommissioning yields a timeline of reservoir channel change. Comparison of a pre-dam survey in 1911 with post-removal surveys provides a basis from which to gage the Reservoir Reach evolution in the context of pre-dam conditions. Analyses of time-lapse photography, topographic surveys, and repeat LiDAR data sets provide detailed spatial and temporal documentation of a release of sediment from the reservoir following dam removal. The majority of morphologic changes to the reservoir largely took place during the first few days and weeks following removal. Channel incision and widening, along with gradient changes through the Reservoir Reach, exhibit diminishing changes with time. Channel incision rates of up to 13 m/hr and widening rates of up to 26 m/hr occurred within the first 24 hours following breaching of the coffer dam. Although channel position through the Reservoir Reach has remained relatively stable due to valley confinement, its width increased substantially. The channel reached an average width of 45 m within two weeks of breaching, but then erosion rates slowed and the channel width reached about 70 to 80 m after one and two years, respectively. Diminishing volumes of evacuated sediment were measured over time through quantitative analysis of survey datasets. About 15 percent of the initial impounded sediment was eroded from the Reservoir Reach within 60 hours of breaching; after one and two years, 50 and 58 percent was eroded, respectively. Grain-size analysis of terraces cut into reservoir fill following dam removal show that bed material coarsened over time at fixed elevations and vertically downward as the channel incised. Overall, these findings indicate valley morphology and local in-channel bedrock topography controlled the spatial distribution of sediment within the reservoir reach while variability in river discharge determined the timing of episodic sediment release. Changes within the Reservoir Reach shortly after dam removal and subsequent evolution over the two years following removal are likely attributable to 1) the timing and intensity of flow events, 2) the longitudinal and stratigraphic spatial variations in deposit grain-size distributions initially and over time, and 3) the pre-dam topography and existing valley morphology.
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