Title: ESM 234: River Systems
1ESM 234 River Systems
- Tom Dunne
- tdunne_at_bren.ucsb.edu
- Tel 893-7557
- Lectures 1000 1115 am Mondays and Wednesday
- Office hours by appointment and when the office
door is open (Bren 3510) - After class is a predictable time to catch me
- TA Lee Harrison,
- Ph.D. Candidate in Earth Science Dept.,
Consultant, - Labs at 5 750 pm Wednesdays, Bren Computer lab.
2Course description
- Hydrologic and geomorphic background of
environmental management problems concerning
large river systems. - Analysis of the processes of flooding,
sedimentation, and morphological change in
channels, floodplains, deltas, and alluvial fans.
Effects of climate, land use and engineering. - Practice in analyzing management problems
associated with large rivers and their
floodplains, including a California field
exercise. Report writing on results - Practice in using simulation models to analyze
environmental management problems in river
systems Report writing on results.
3Syllabus
- Jan 8 River valleys as habitat for humans and
their management problems - Jan 10 River valleys as habitat for more
charismatic species. Geological and ecological
conceptions of large rivers - Jan 10 Lab assignment on river management
problems - Jan 17 Flow regimes
- Description
- statistical prediction
- deterministic prediction
- Jan 17 Lab assignment on basin flow prediction
-
- Jan 19 Santa Clara River field trip 800 am 2
pm
4- Jan 22 Managed flow regimes
- flow regulation
- inter-basin water transfers
-
- Jan 24 Flood regimes
- generation processes and controls
- deterministic prediction
- emerging forms of prediction
- Jan 29 Flood regimes
- statistical analysis and probabilistic prediction
- historical and paleohistorical reconstruction
-
- Jan 31 Flood regimes
- flood routing and prediction of inundation
- remote sensing and other forms of inundation
predictions - Jan 31 Lab assignment on river hydraulics and
flood routing
5- Feb 5 Sedimentation sources and storage of
sediment - Feb 7 Sediment transport processes
- Feb 12 Sediment transport predictions
- Feb 14 Sediment transport and channel
sedimentation modeling - Feb 14 Lab assignment on sediment transport and
routing - Feb 21 Flood regimes impacts of floods
- Feb 26 Flood regimes flood risk management
6- Feb 28 Flood regimes effects of dams and
reservoirs - Feb 28 Lab/field assignment on river channel
management - Mar 5 River channel form and behavior
- Mar 7 Floodplains, deltas and estuaries
- Mar 12 Management of sedimentation
- Mar 14 River restoration
7Evaluation scheme
- Five reports on problems assigned in lab
- One web research
- Three computer modeling exercises
- One analysis of a field problem in river
management (requires attendance at field trip, 8
am-2 pm on Friday Jan 19). - Grading based on thoroughness of analysis and
effectiveness of writing. -
8Suggested Reading (Univ. Bookstore)
- Jeffrey F. Mount, California Rivers and Streams
The Conflict Between Fluvial Process and Land
Use, Univ. of California Press, 1995 (paperback). - A. Robert, River Processes an introduction to
fluvial dynamics, Oxford Univ. Press, 2003
(paperback). - Ill send you other stuff electronically
9The Real Books on Big Rivers
- Sanche de Gramont (1975) The Strong Brown God
The story of the Niger River, Hart, Davis,
MacGibbon, London, 350 pp. - Bates (1868?) A Naturalist on the River Amazon
- Alan Moorehead, The White Nile
- Alan Moorehead, The Blue Nile
- Peter Forbath, (1977) The River Congo, Harpers
Rowe, New York - Joseph Conrad (1923) Heart of Darkness, New York,
- Charles Greer (1979) Water Management in the
Yellow River Basin of China, Univ. of Texas
Press, Austin, 174 pp.
10- V.S. Naipaul (1979) A Bend in the River, Knopf,
New York - Mark Twain Life on the Mississippi
- John Hersey A Single Pebble (Yangzte)
- M. Goulding, N.J.H. Smith, and D.J. Mahar (1995)
Floods of Fortune Ecology and Economy along the
Amazon - J. M. Barry (1997) Rising Tide The great
Mississippi flood of 1927 and how it changed
America, Simon Schuster - J. Stine, Mixing of the Waters, Deep as it comes
(1927 flood in the Mississippi delta), Univ.
Arkansas Press - M. Childs (1982) Mighty Mississippi biography of
a river, Ticknor Fields, New York, 204 p. - R. Kelley (1989) Battling the Inland Sea floods,
public policy, and the Sacramento Valley, Univ.
California Press, Berkeley. - Peter Hessler, River Town two years on the
Yangtze
11Large River Systems
- Large?
- Rivers too big to be impacted by most land
transformation caused by humans. Watershed
Analysis, ESM 235, covers smaller rivers. - Controls on their behavior are mainly
- physiographic (i.e. driven by global tectonics
and postglacial geological history) - hydroclimatological (driven by global climate)
- land-sea level changes near mouth
- engineering within and near the channel
- Continental-scale rivers down to regional rivers
larger than a few 1000 km2. - Our field study sites will be the Santa Clara R.
(4000 km2), Sacramento R. ( 70,000 km2), San
Joaquin (82880) km2)
12River Systems?
- Not just the channel, but
- whole basin
- channel network
- valley floor
- estuary or delta
- lakes, if present (natural and artificial)
- River systems comprise features that have
enormous social and ecological significance. - The alluvial lowlands of large rivers are foci of
settlement for vast human populations sustained
by water supply, fertile soils, and ease of land
and water transport.
13General Principles
- River systems are complex systems, through which
are focused irregular fluxes of water and mobile
terrestrial materials derived from the
lithosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and
technosphere. - The dynamics of the transport, storage, and
interactions of these materials creates channel
and valley-floor environments with which the
river continually interacts, creating certain
functions and environmental conditions. - The resulting functions and environments change
both gradually and episodically due to both
external forcings and internal dynamics.
14General Principles
- Ecological changes (including human exploitation)
therefore include both successional changes and
perturbations of various intensities, which may
re-set or replace the succession. - The continual creation results in spatial and
temporal complexity (rather than a single
continuum of environments linked by transport.) - Differences among river systems in the relative
strengths of gradual and episodic change result
in differences of complexity and function.
Affects transferability of information.
15Large rivers have histories (and face futures) of
environmental change
- The continental-scale river systems of Earth
represent some of the largest and most dynamic
environmental units on the planet - They express the results of global change, as
indicated by the elemental and isotopic records
of past environmental variations such as - ice age-age conditions, other climatic
fluctuations, - vegetation change,
- human settlement found in alluvial and deltaic
sediments.
16Large rivers have histories (and face futures) of
environmental change
-
- Environmental records indicate how large river
systems work and how they change - Brought to societys attention when Hurricane
Katrina struck the Mississippi Delta - Similar acknowledgment (last week) about the
Sacramento R. floodplain and California-Bay
Delta - Governments and other large, complex management
systems with long-term commitments narrow
interests have difficulties acknowledging
evidence of change and its attendant
uncertainties. - They tend to resist the idea that there is any
useful understanding of environmental processes.
17- Thus, large river valleys present some enduring,
refractory problems of environmental management,
which societies must control or adjust to. - In class, we will review examples of such
management issues, which you need to prepare
yourselves to participate in. Examples - Colorado River floods and sedimentation below
Glen Canyon Dam - California streamflows
- Everglades Restoration
- Anoxic marine zone off the mouth of the
Mississippi River - Flood hazard management along Lower Mississippi
River - International conflict over water rights and
development plans on Nile River - Aral Sea
- CALFED San Francisco Bay-Delta Ecosystem
Restoration Program
18Typical River Problems to Manage Colorado R.
19Typical River Problems to Manage California
streamflows
20Typical River Problems to Manage Everglades
New York Times
21Typical River Problems to Manage Gulf of Mexico
Dead Zone and Mississippi R. contaminants
22Typical River Problems to Manage New Orleans
Flood Hazard
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24New Orleans flood riskNYT, 2002
25New Orleans Flood RiskNYT, 2002
26Nile R. basin upstream flow use and plans for
diversion to the Western Desert
27Typical River Problems to Manage Global
disruption of river flow regimes
C. J. Vorosmarty et al, Humans transforming the
global water system, EOS Transaction, 85(4),
509-514, 2004.
28Typical River Problems to Manage Aral Sea inflow
diversions
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30Aral Sea
31News
California begins to restore its rivers.
Waits for Bren students.
32Bay-Delta watershed
Watershed for the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta
33Bay-Delta location
Geographic scope of problem identification
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41CalFed
Restore ecosystem health and improve water
management in the Bay-Delta system
Increase reliability of water supplies
Improve water quality
Improve aquatic and terrestrial habitats
Strengthen levee system
At-risk species
Introduced species
Habitats
Ecological processes
Aquatic toxicity
Harvestable species
Large expanses of wetlands in C. Valley
Increase freely meandering rivers
Many river restoration actions
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44Regional perspective differing priorities
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50Program perspective
Restore ecosystem health and improve water
management in the Bay-Delta system
Increase reliability of water supplies
Improve water quality
Improve aquatic and terrestrial habitats
Strengthen levee system
At-risk species
Introduced species
Habitats
Ecological processes
Aquatic toxicity
Harvestable species
Large expanses of wetlands in C. Valley
Increase freely meandering rivers
Many river restoration actions
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59River Restoration
River restoration
- Altering the form and behavior (or structure and
function) of river channels and floodplains,
often with the intention of increasing the
production and biodiversity of organisms. - Improving water quality
- Ensuring the safety of communities
60Sacramento R.
61Lower Sacramento River
62Sacramento River
63Sacramento R. bars
64Merced River Aerial
65Merced Robinson reach before restoration
66- River systems comprise features that have
enormous social and ecological significance. - The alluvial lowlands of large rivers are foci of
settlement for vast human populations sustained
by water supply, fertile soils, and ease of land
and water transport (Read Wittfogels "Hydraulic
Civilizations" "The Earth As Transformed by
Human Action", etc.) - Throughout Earth history, these alluvial storages
have sequestered sediment, carbon, and other
biogeochemical materials, and they have generated
intricate and dynamic habitats for plants and
animals. - The continental-scale river systems focus the
runoff, sediment and chemical yields of large
fractions of the continents into valleys, coastal
zones, and epicontinental seas where they affect
marine chemistry, biological productivity, and
susceptibility to freezing near-shore
sedimentation and landforms and other
environmental conditions that influence human
affairs. - The effects of basin-wide climatic, geological,
and biological features on the yields of water
and transported materials ensure that
continental-scale processes such as
land-atmosphere interactions, mountain building
and sedimentation, and human activities are
focused into narrow zones along alluvial valleys
and coastal zones which are the most vital parts
of the planet to human settlement and to a large
part of the rest of the biosphere.
67- Humans use these same rivers for water supply
(consumptive and nonconsumptive), waste disposal,
navigation, waste disposal, boundary demarcation,
recreation (but not many of the worlds riparian
population get to use them for this!), power
generation, fisheries, and lately the
maintenance of ecosystem values. - Continental-scale river basins focus even subtle
global environmental changes, such as ENSO
events, small changes relative to sea level, or
anthropogenic alterations of sediment and
chemical fluxes into narrow zones (valley floors,
estuarine, deltaic, and nearshore environments),
which are heavily populated by humans or contain
great biological diversity. Human activities are
thus impacted significantly by changes in water
quantity (e.g. floods, droughts, navigability,
hydroelectric power) and quality (e.g. salinity,
sediments, excess nutrients, toxic pollutants),
as well as by physical changes in the valley
floor and channel environments themselves.