Sedimentation Processes: Geomorphological evidence for staged sand dam
construction
Abstract
Steam sediment transport is a convolution of climate, weather, geology,
topography, biology, and human influence. In addition to providing water
and food security for dryland rural communities, sand dams—small weirs
designed to trap only the coarse fractions of transported sediments in
seasonal and ephemeral streams—illuminate many complexities of
geomorphological dynamics. Sand dams store water in interstitial
riverbed pores and the size of deposited sediment particles largely
determines the recoverability of stored water: fine materials limit
transmission and provide lower volumetric yield. Can a sand dam be
designed for a particular reach-scale, hydro-sedimentary context to
limit capture of fine particles? We argue that the Rouse number provides
a useful criterion for identifying regimes where the target material
grades are trapped. These ideas were tested using sediment data
collected in Kenya and HEC-RAS numerical simulations to evaluate the
sensitivity of sedimentation processes to spillway height. We show that
constructing sand dams in stages results in more targeted trapping of
coarse material. Surprisingly, sedimentation is shown to be more
sensitive to variation in spillway height than the flood hydrograph,
especially when a dam is short. A method for evaluating the need for
spillway staging (essentially controlling the bedform) based on the
modeled Rouse number allows evaluation of costs and expected benefits.
Beyond sand dams, this supports the observation that for dryland streams
with peaky flows and high sediment loading, local hydraulic controls are
typically more diagnostic of streambed sediment composition than is the
sediment source.