Title: Bay Sediment Budgets:
1Bay Sediment Budgets Sediment Accounting 101
David Schoellhamer Megan Lionberger Bruce
Jaffe Neil Ganju Scott Wright Greg Shellenbarger
U.S. Geological Survey
NASA
2A sediment budget describes the quantity of
sediment
- Entering the Bay
- Leaving the Bay
- Depositing in or eroding from the Bay
3Who cares?
- Dredgers disposal of deposition in ports and
channels - Regulators and dischargers sediment associated
contaminants and TMDLs - Restoration managers deposition needed for
restoration without eroding existing habitat
4Accounting rules
- Where SF Bay from Mallard Island to Golden Gate
- When Water years 1955-1990, 1995-2002, and a
normal water year 1995-2002
- Lifeline Conservation of mass
inflow-outflowchange in storage
- Uncertainty varies by term,
Not THE answer Steve Ritchie
5Odgen Beeman and Krone 1955-1990
6New information for 1955-1990
7Revised 1955-1990 annual budget
Units are mass in millions of metric tons per
year (1.5 Mcy)
8Revised 1955-1990 annual budget
Assume Krone Central Bay deposition is ocean
sand
9Revised 1955-1990 annual budget
Suspended sediment outflow from conservation of
mass (lifeline)
10Revised 1955-1990 annual budget
Sand mining is a very rough estimate
111995-2002 annual budget
121995-2002 annual budget
Box model used to get change in storage and
outflow
131995-2002 annual budget
Assume no change in supply of ocean sand
141995-2002 was all wet
15Normal 1995-2002 annual budget
Remove water years 1995 and 1998 where possible
161955-1990
1995-2002
171955-1990
1995-2002
181955-1990
1995-2002
191955-1990
1995-2002
201955-1990
1995-2002
211955-1990
1995-2002
22Implications
- Sediments disposed of in the ocean may be needed
to maintain and restore Bay habitats - The Bay bottom will continue to erode and supply
legacy contaminants - Restoration sites will be depositional and may
increase erosion elsewhere - Dredging, restoration, and water quality are
connected by the sediment budget
23Most important and most uncertain terms
- Golden Gate fine suspended sediment outflow
(model because difficult to measure) - Golden Gate sand supply, 1.2-2.9 MMT/yr (Central
Bay bathymetric change) - Eroded mass (new surveys, measure bed density)
- Sediment supply from watershed (25)
24Acknowledgements
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
- SF Regional Water Quality Control Board
- California State Coastal Conservancy
- USGS Priority Ecosystem Science Program
- USGS Federal/State Cooperative Program
- Lester McKee
- Patricia Chambers and Linda Wanczyk