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GCDAMP Sediment
From Glen Canyon Dam AMP
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Cellsworth
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250px
DFC:
Maintain or attain levels of sediment storage within the main channel and along shorelines to achieve ecosystem goals.
TBD
(Motions)
TBD
(TBD)
TBD
GROUP MEMBERS
TWG Sediment Ad-Hoc Group formed November 8, 2001
News
Quick Facts
Eddies occur adjacent to rapids and the flow in the eddy is related to the flow characteristics in the rapid. Sand bars were typically larger before the dam.(Science Background for HFE Planning- Jack Schmidt, GCMRC_KA 2013)
Sediment Presentation- AMWG Jan 2002
Sediment White Paper- AMWG Jan 2002
The United States Geological Survey estimates that the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam only has 6 percent of the sediment that it received before the Glen Canyon Dam was built in the 1960s.
History
Information
Paria River sediment gage
Click here to calculate how much sediment has come in from the Paria River.
The HFE Page
See summaries from past HFEs
ADDITIONAL------------------------------->
Sediment Gages
Colorado River at Lees Ferry
Paria River at Lees Ferry
Colorado River at 30 mile
Colorado River above LCR
Bright Angel Creek
Shinumo Creek
Colorado River abv Lava Canyon rm66
Colorado River bl rm127
Kanab Creek
Havasu Creek
Colorado River abv National Canyon
Colorado River bl Diamond Creek
Colorado River abv Spencer rm246
Reports and Links
2016
Project 2: Streamflow, Water Quality, Sediment Transport, and Sand Budgets in the Colorado River Ecosystem
Sandbars and Sediment Storage in Marble and Grand Canyons: Response to Recent high-flow Experiments and Long-Term Trends
Observations of sand dune migration on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon using high-resolution multibeam bathymetry
2015
Updates on 2014 HFE, Paria sediment inputs, and sediment mass balance
Alvarez, L.V. (2015) Turbulence, Sediment Transport, Erosion, and Sandbar Beach Failure Processes in Grand Canyon. Ph.D. Dissertation, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 176pp.
Grams, P. E., J. C. Schmidt, S. A. Wright, D. J. Topping, T. S. Melis, and D. M. Rubin (2015), Building Sandbars in the Grand Canyon, EOS, Trans. Am. Geophys. Union, 96(11), 12–16.
Streamflow, Water Quality, and Sediment Transport in the Colorado River Ecosystem
Sandbars and Sediment Storage in Marble and Grand Canyons: Response to Recent High-flow Experiments and Long-term Trends
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