Title of article :
Seasonal variation of hydrodynamics and sediment dynamics in a shallow subtropical estuary: the Ba Lat River, Vietnam
Author/Authors :
D. S. van Maren، نويسنده , , P. Hoekstra، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The Red River is the largest river in the north of Vietnam, transporting 100 million tons of dominantly silty sediment annually.
Hydrographic surveys were conducted in the dry and wet seasons of 2000 in its main branch, to determine sub-tidal and intra-tidal
river outflow patterns and sediment transport processes, plus their seasonal variation. It was found that stratification is strongly
season-dependent resulting in partly stratified conditions in the dry season when the dominant stratifying and de-stratifying
processes are tidal straining, tidal advection, and bed-generated turbulent mixing. The wet season is characterized by stratified
conditions when estuarine circulation and advection of stratification by tidal currents and river flow are the main stratifying and destratifying
mechanisms. A salt-wedge type density-driven circulation was observed in the highly stratified wet season, but the estuary
is too shallow for development of classical estuarine circulation in the partly stratified dry season. In the dry season, tidal currents
dominate flow patterns and sediment is mainly resuspended locally. The magnitudes of maximum inflow and outflow velocities in
the river channel are equal because river discharge is compensated for by flood tidal asymmetry, but net sediment transport is
directed seaward because the outflow period is longer. In the wet season, outflow velocities are considerably higher and the period of
outflow is longer, whereas inflow velocities are low. Sediment transport is dominated by advection processes, rather than by local
resuspension, and the estuary is flushed during each ebb period.
Keywords :
mixing , Red River Delta , Estuaries , sediment transport , river floods , stratification , Vietnam
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science