H33C-1624
INVESTIGATION OF HYPORHEIC THERMAL FLUX AND DOWNSTREAM ATTENUATION DRIVEN BY HYDROPEAKING IN THE COLORADO RIVER, AUSTIN, TEXAS
Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Jeffery A Watson, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States
Abstract:
Thermal flux related to regulated river hydropeaking has been extensively researched at the single-study site scale, but little work has been done quantifying the downstream attenuation of a single regulated flood pulse at multiple sites. In order to better understand this flood pulse attenuation we instrumented four sites with temperature probes along a 91 km stretch of the Colorado River downstream of longhorn dam, Austin, TX. Piezometer transects perpendicular to the river at each site were instrumented with HOBO thermistors over a 1.4m screened interval within the saturated zone at 20cm spacing. As flood pulses are attenuated downstream, temperature gradients and distance of lateral temperature pulse penetration into the bank are hypothesized to decrease. The data collected in this investigation will test this hypothesis by providing 2D temperature cross-sections along an attenuating flood pulse, providing detailed spatial data on temperature gradients adjacent to the river.