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Sand pulses and sand patches on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon

December 1, 2017

Alluvial sandbars occur in lateral recirculation zones (eddies) along the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park (Schmidt, 1990). Resource managers periodically release controlled floods from the upstream Glen Canyon Dam to rebuild these bars (Grams et al., 2015), which erode during fluctuating dam releases, and by hillslope runoff and wind deflation (Hazel et al., 2010). Because the dam blocks upstream sediment, episodic floods from tributaries provide the only supply to replace eroded sand; and much of this sand originates from a single tributary (Topping et al., 2000). Here, we present new evidence for the downstream translation of the sand component of these sediment inputs as discontinuous sand pulses. Improved understanding of the behaviour of these sand pulses may be used to adjust the timing, magnitude, and duration of controlled floods to maximize potential for deposition on sandbars in different segments of the 450 km-long Grand Canyon.

Publication Year 2017
Title Sand pulses and sand patches on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon
Authors Paul E. Grams, Daniel Buscombe, David Topping, Erich R. Mueller
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70192851
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Southwest Biological Science Center