Synoptic observations of sediment transport and exchange mechanisms in the turbid Ems Estuary

The EDoM campaign

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Dirk S. van Maren (Deltares, East China Normal University, TU Delft - Civil Engineering & Geosciences)

Christian Maushake (Federal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute)

Jan-Willem Mol (Rijkswaterstaat)

Daan van Keulen (Wageningen University & Research)

Jens Jürges (Federal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute)

Julia Vroom (Deltares)

Henk Schuttelaars (TU Delft - Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science)

Theo Gerkema (The University of Texas at Austin)

Kirstin Schulz (The University of Texas at Austin)

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Research Group
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-15-53-2023 Final published version
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Research Group
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
Journal title
Earth System Science Data
Issue number
1
Volume number
15
Pages (from-to)
53-73
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435
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Institutional Repository
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Abstract

An extensive field campaign, the Ems-Dollard Measurements (EDoM), was executed in the Ems Estuary, bordering the Netherlands and Germany, aimed at better understanding the mechanisms that drive the exchange of water and sediments between a relatively exposed outer estuary and a hyper-turbid tidal river. More specifically, the reasons for the large up-estuary sediment accumulation rates and the role of the tidal river on the turbidity in the outer estuary were insufficiently understood. The campaign was designed to unravel the hydrodynamic and sedimentary exchange mechanisms, comprising two hydrographic surveys during contrasting environmental conditions using eight concurrently operating ships and 10 moorings measuring for at least one spring–neap tidal cycle. All survey locations were equipped with sensors measuring flow velocity, salinity, and turbidity (and with stationary ship surveys taking water samples), while some of the survey ships also measured turbulence and sediment settling properties. These observations have provided important new insights into horizontal sediment fluxes and density-driven exchange flows, both laterally and longitudinally. An integral analysis of these observations suggests that large-scale residual transport is surprisingly similar during periods of high and low discharge, with higher river discharge resulting in both higher seaward-directed fluxes near the surface and landward-directed fluxes near the bed. Sediment exchange seems to be strongly influenced by a previously undocumented lateral circulation cell driving residual transport. Vertical density-driven flows in the outer estuary are influenced by variations in river discharge, with a near-bed landward flow being most pronounced in the days following a period with elevated river discharge. The study site is more turbid during winter conditions, when the estuarine turbidity maximum (ETM) is pushed seaward by river flow, resulting in a more pronounced impact of suspended sediments on hydrodynamics. All data collected during the EDoM campaign, but also standard monitoring data (waves, water levels, discharge, turbidity, and salinity) collected by Dutch and German authorities are made publicly available at 4TU Centre for Research Data (https://doi.org/10.4121/c.6056564.v3; van Maren et al., 2022).