{"title":"含沙砾河床细泥沙储量的估算","authors":"J. Deng, B. Camenen, C. Legoût, G. Nord","doi":"10.1111/sed.13132","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Fine sediment stored in the gravel bed is an important component of river systems. Current field protocols usually allow evaluation of the silt–clay fraction of fine sediment stocks only and neglect the sand fraction. This study proposes a new protocol to quantify fine sediment stocks, including the sand fraction inside the gravel bed matrix. Fine sediment stocks were sampled within patches of 0.30 m × 0.30 m on the dry gravel bed surface, separating the surface layer and the subsurface layer. The grain‐size distribution of the samples was obtained by field sieving (10 mm, 2 mm, 500 μm and 100 μm) over a bucket, using a known volume of water. The mass of the fraction below 100 μm was measured based on the concentration within the bucket. The local stocks were then integrated over the whole river reach by assigning local stocks to facies, in which fine sediment stocks were assumed to be homogeneously distributed. The methodology was applied to a 1 km long reach of the River Galabre (Southern French Alps), characterized by significant fine sediment stocks and upstream sediment input. Results from local measurements show a large amount of sand in both surface and subsurface layers. The quantity of sand can reach up to three times the quantity of silt–clay. An estimation of porosity showed that fine material may play an important role in structuring the bed, since porosity increases with increasing fine sediment content. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
储存在砾石层中的细泥沙是水系的重要组成部分。目前的现场方案通常只允许评估细沉积物的粉砂粘土部分,而忽略了砂部分。本研究提出了一种新的方案来量化细粒沉积物储量,包括砾石床基质内的砂分数。在干砾石床表面0.30 m × 0.30 m的斑块内取样细粒沉积物,将表层与次表层分开。样品的粒度分布通过使用已知体积的水在桶上进行现场筛分(10 mm, 2 mm, 500 μm和100 μm)获得。根据桶内浓度测定100 μm以下馏分的质量。然后,通过将局部种群划分为相,将整个河段的局部种群进行整合,并假设细粒沉积物种群均匀分布。该方法应用于Galabre河(法国南部阿尔卑斯山脉)1公里长的河段,其特征是大量的细沉积物和上游沉积物输入。局部测量结果显示,表层和次表层都有大量的沙子。沙子的数量可以达到粉质粘土数量的三倍。孔隙度的估算表明,细粒物质可能在床的构造中起重要作用,因为孔隙度随着细粒沉积物含量的增加而增加。研究发现,由于河道迁移而可能重新悬浮的潜在细沙存量与研究河段上游水文站测量通量估算的泥沙收支具有相同的数量级。
Estimation of fine sediment stocks in gravel bed rivers including the sand fraction
Fine sediment stored in the gravel bed is an important component of river systems. Current field protocols usually allow evaluation of the silt–clay fraction of fine sediment stocks only and neglect the sand fraction. This study proposes a new protocol to quantify fine sediment stocks, including the sand fraction inside the gravel bed matrix. Fine sediment stocks were sampled within patches of 0.30 m × 0.30 m on the dry gravel bed surface, separating the surface layer and the subsurface layer. The grain‐size distribution of the samples was obtained by field sieving (10 mm, 2 mm, 500 μm and 100 μm) over a bucket, using a known volume of water. The mass of the fraction below 100 μm was measured based on the concentration within the bucket. The local stocks were then integrated over the whole river reach by assigning local stocks to facies, in which fine sediment stocks were assumed to be homogeneously distributed. The methodology was applied to a 1 km long reach of the River Galabre (Southern French Alps), characterized by significant fine sediment stocks and upstream sediment input. Results from local measurements show a large amount of sand in both surface and subsurface layers. The quantity of sand can reach up to three times the quantity of silt–clay. An estimation of porosity showed that fine material may play an important role in structuring the bed, since porosity increases with increasing fine sediment content. The potential fine sediment stock that can be re‐suspended due to channel migration is found to be of the same order of magnitude as the sediment budget estimated from the measured flux in the upstream hydrometric station of the studied reach.
期刊介绍:
The international leader in its field, Sedimentology publishes ground-breaking research from across the spectrum of sedimentology, sedimentary geology and sedimentary geochemistry.
Areas covered include: experimental and theoretical grain transport; sediment fluxes; modern and ancient sedimentary environments; sequence stratigraphy sediment-organism interaction; palaeosoils; diagenesis; stable isotope geochemistry; environmental sedimentology