EV

Enrica Viparelli

18 records found

Channel bed incision in engineered rivers

Characteristics and mitigation

Engineered rivers are often prone to channel bed incision. This decreases the channel-floodplain connection, hampers navigation where nonerodible reaches increasingly protrude from the bed, and can destabilize structures. Here we inventorize causes and characteristics of channel ...
The Waal Branch of the Rhine River has eroded over the last 150 years following channel straightening and narrowing. In 2014–2015 a pilot project replaced existing groynes over an 11 km long reach with three longitudinal training walls (LTWs) to mitigate channel bed erosion, amon ...
Engineering modifications of rivers, e.g., dams or groynes, often induce long-term riverbed erosion, which can be mitigated with sediment nourishments. Here, we consider nourishments to mitigate channel bed erosion induced by channel narrowing, as opposed to the more common appli ...

River Response to Anthropogenic Modification

Channel Steepening and Gravel Front Fading in an Incising River

While most of the world's large rivers are heavily engineered, channel response to engineering measures on decadal to century and several 100 km scales is scarcely documented. We investigate the response of the Lower Rhine River (Germany-Netherlands) to engineering measures, in t ...
The Rhine River, like many highly-engineered channels throughout the world, has experienced a long history of human-made modifications to suit stakeholders. While the implementations have changed over time, the goal has been generally consistent – to ensure flood safety and navig ...
In response to changes in the upstream controls (i.e., the water discharge, the sediment supply rate, and the calibre of the load), engineered alluvial channels adjust their bed slope and bed surface texture to establish a new equilibrium state. Here we present and discuss variou ...
Engineered alluvial channels are dynamic systems and continuously adjust their bed slope (by aggradation and degradation) and bed surface texture in response to changes in the upstream controls i.e., the water discharge, the rate and calibre of the sediment supply (Mackin 1948, B ...
Laboratory experiments were conducted on a sand-gravel Gilbert delta to gain insight on its dynamics under varying base level. Base level rise results in intensified aggradation over the topset, as well as a decrease in topset slope and topset surface coarsening, the signals of w ...
Downstream fining of bed sediment in alluvial rivers is usually gradual, but often an abrupt decrease in characteristic grain size occurs from about 10 to 1 mm, i.e., a gravel-sand transition (GST) or gravel front. Here we present an analytical model of GST migration that explici ...
A gravel-sand transition (GST) seems to be the result of a gravel wedge. Such a wedge can prograde, halt, and even retreat. It is typical of an ungraded or transient reach (Blom et al., 2016), where profile concavity and downstream fining can be much stronger than in a graded or ...
The main objective of this research is to  improve our understanding of the relative  contribution of the causes of long-term bed  degradation in Rhine and other degrading  rivers. That is, the research is intended to  quantify past channel adjustment processes,  mainly bed degra ...
Sediment management measures are  becoming increasingly popular as they are  considered sustainable from both economic  and environmental point of view. For example,  aimed at counteracting river bed degradation,  sediment nourishments have been carried out  in the German reaches ...

The graded alluvial river

Profile concavity and downstream fining

There has been quite some debate on the relative importance of particle abrasion and grain size selective transport regarding the river profile form and the associated grain size trends in a graded alluvial stream. Here we present new theoretical equations for the graded alluvial ...