SEDHYD-2023, Sedimentation and Hydrologic Modeling Conference

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State of The Science and Decision Support For Measuring Suspended Sediment With Acoustic Instrumentation

Acoustic instrumentation can be used to accurately and cost-effectively provide time-series and discrete estimates of suspended-sediment concentration, load, and sediment particle sizes in fluvial systems, which are essential for creating informed solutions to many sediment-related environmental, engineering, and land management concerns. Historically, scientists have developed relations between suspended sediment characteristics and other parameters, most commonly streamflow, to estimate sediment information when physical sediment samples cannot be collected. Approaches using streamflow can have substantial accuracy limitations because of hysteresis effects; however, the use of more direct surrogate methods such as acoustic methods have become increasingly important. Interagency efforts in recent years have advanced the testing, methods development, operational guidelines, and training on acoustic methods for measuring suspended sediment. Scientists interested in using these methods are faced with many decisions on the type of application and deployment: horizontal profiling, vertical profiling, or point acoustic instruments; single or multi-frequency instruments; continuous or discrete sediment measurements; and fixed or mobile instrument deployments. To promote cost-effective, accurate, and high-resolution fluvial sediment data for the Nation, the interagency Sediment Acoustic Leadership Team (SALT) develops technical guidance and training for using acoustic instruments to measure aquatic sediment. Even though acoustic instrumentation has been used successfully to measure suspended-sediment characteristics throughout the world, some deployments have been unsuccessful because of limited technical guidance and selection of an inappropriate method. To guide decisions on method selection, the SALT has compiled the state of the science for the main types of acoustics-based suspended-sediment measurement methods in development, testing, and use, and has created a flowchart to guide method selection.

Molly Wood
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Joel Groten
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Timothy Straub
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Daniel Whealdon-Haught
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Ronald Griffiths
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Justin Boldt
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Zulimar Lucena
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Jeb Brown
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Steven Suttles
U.S. Geological Survey
United States

Patrick Dickhudt
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
United States

 



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