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A Sediment Budget for

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Title: A Sediment Budget for


1
A Sediment Budget for Two Reaches of Alameda
Creek (1900s through 2006)
Paul Bigelow, Sarah Pearce, Lester McKee, and
Alicia Gilbreath
2
Study Questions
  • Are the study reaches supplying a major source of
    sediment to the flood control channel?
  • What are the dominant processes, and what are the
    rates of erosion and amount of storage?
  • What proportion of total sediment load at Niles
    is derived from the study reaches?
  • How has the channel changed through time?

3
Alameda CreekWatershed
4
Area BehindDams
5
Study Area
6
Brief Watershed History
  • Pre-1900 channel ditching, groundwater wells,
    small dams
  • 1900 Ditching and draining of Tulare Lake
  • 1911 ADLL incision rate of 6 in/yr

7
1925 Calaveras Dam, gravel mining 1950s Four
largest flood events on record 1964 San Antonio
Dam 1968 Del Valle Dam 1970s Flood Control
Channel construction 1980s to 2000s Flood
Control Channel dredging
Oblique view of Pleasanton and Dublin (looking
west) during the 1955 flood
8
Historical Flow Changes
9
Arroyo De La Laguna
Lower Subreach
Upper Subreach
10
Arroyo De La Laguna
11
Arroyo De La Laguna
12
Alameda Creek
13
Sediment Budget Methods
  • Incision bed elevation surveys 1959, 1971, 2007
  • Bank Erosion Bar Storage field surveys and
    air photo analysis
  • Cross Section Surveys historical and current
  • Flood Plain Storage field surveys
  • Only subset of data collected for Alameda Creek
    Reach
  • (little incision, 90 of drainage area above
    dams)

14
Compare Reaches w/ Watershed
Verona Gage Welch Gage Study Reaches Ungaged
Tribs Niles Gage?
  • Balance the Budget
  • Estimate Yield at Gages (rating curves)
  • Estimate Yield for Ungaged tributaries (reservoir
    sedimentation rate)
  • Compare Reaches w/ Niles Gage

15
Sediment Budget Periods
  • 1901 1959
  • 1959 1971
  • 1971 1993
  • 1993 2006

16
ResultsLong Profiles
  • Arroyo De La Laguna
  • Bed Elevation
  • 1901 1959

4.5 m ave total incision depth 6 10 cm/yr
17
1959 to 1971 Bed Elevation
1-2 m incision depth 7 15 cm/yr
18
1971 to 2007 Bed Elevation
0.5 0.8 m incision 2 6 cm/yr
0.75 m aggradation
19
Incision Pattern Over TimeIncision Migrating
Upstream
20
Further Upstream
21
Bank Erosion Bar Storage Aerial Photograph
Analysis
  • Assessed entire study reach
  • Focused on four locations
  • Four time periods
  • Quantified bank erosion and bar storage

22
1939 Photo
23
1950 Photo
24
1966 Photo
25
1993 Photo
26
2005 Photo
27
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28
Bank erosion (metric tonnes/yr)
29
Channel Cross Sections
30
Channel Cross Sections
5-6 m
5-6 m
31
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32
Flood Plain Storage
33
Sediment Budget by Process - ADLL
34
Alameda Creek Reach
35
Overall Watershed Comparisonfor Recent Period
(1994 2006)
Within 5
36
Study Reaches Comparison to Niles Gage
37
Study Area Sediment Yield Comparison to Regional
Values
38
Sediment Budget Take Home Points
  • Sediment budget has adjusted over several periods
    of land use alteration and disturbance from
    floods
  • Budget dominated by incision in earlier periods,
    now adjusting through bank erosion
  • ADLL sediment yield is high for a short reach
    (0.25 of total stream network length)
  • But ADLL comprises a small portion of watershed
    sediment yield (6 of total yield)

39
Future Channel Evolution
  • Channel Evolution Models
  • Process-based classification
  • Describe channel form as it responds to a
    disturbance
  • Shows typical channel adjustments to return a
    balance of sediment transport capacity

40
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41
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42
Future Response of ADLL
  • Conceptual Scenarios

43
Next Steps - Recommendations
  • Monitor future channel adjustment in ADLL, and
    continue to stabilize the reach
  • Given management changes on Alameda Creek,
    monitor future channel response for sediment
    supply increase
  • Conduct a phased watershed sediment budget
  • Phase 1 Quantitatively (on public lands) and
    qualitatively (on private lands) assess feasibly
    manageable sediment
  • Phase 2 (if needed) Quantitative evaluation of
    manageable sediment on private lands
  • Conduct numerical modeling to understand sediment
    routing to and deposition within the Flood
    Control Channel
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