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THE SODDEN SWAMPS THAT SURROUND THEM: THREE ESSAYS CONCERNING THE LINKS BETWEEN RIVER CHANNELS AND THEIR OVERBANK ENVIRONMENTS

acase@tulane.edu / Though rivers are inextricably linked in our minds with an intermittently flooded overbank environment, surprisingly little is known about the sedimentary processes that operate there, or how they interact with those of the river. The knowledge gap is acute in deltas, where dense populations often necessitate tightly engineered control over flow patterns, leading to disconnected overbank environments that no longer receive input from the main channel. However, the need to understand sedimentary function in the overbank is also acute in deltas, as rising relative sea levels create an urgent need to manage water and sediment resources.
This dissertation is presented as three primary chapters, each of which examines a different aspect of the hydrodynamic and sedimentary connection between a river’s channel and its overbank environment. In Chapter 2, my coauthors and I ask which factors enhance overbank sediment retention, and what retention rates might be considered typical in deltas. We compare the sediments stored in a crevasse splay to those transported by the river and conclude that retention rates approaching 100% might be achievable in settings that are not exposed to coastal processes. Chapter 4 is also concerned with spatial patterns of sedimentation on a delta. In it we use physical experiments to examine the influence that floods play in mobilizing sediments from the channel and storing them in the overbank environment. We find, counterintuitively, that an experiment whose input included floods has a lower proportion of floodplain to channel deposits preserved than an experiment with a constant input. Chapter 3 is focused on water and sediment dynamics in the channel in a region where significant flow is lost to the overbank environment. Here we present measurements from channel networks in the Mississippi River’s Birdsfoot Delta and show that flow loss along the channels is a critical control on channel function that causes channels of disparate sizes to behave similarly. We use our field results to inform a numerical model of channel bed evolution in a region with flow losses, and conclude that the modern flood control system in the Lower Mississippi River may have significantly changed the bed morphology. / 1 / Christopher R. Esposito

  1. tulane:77023
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TULANE/oai:http://digitallibrary.tulane.edu/:tulane_77023
Date January 2017
ContributorsEsposito, Christopher R. (author), Straub, Kyle M. (Thesis advisor), School of Science & Engineering Earth and Environmental Sciences (Degree granting institution)
PublisherTulane University
Source SetsTulane University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText
Formatelectronic, 133
RightsNo embargo, Copyright is in accordance with U.S. Copyright law.

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