Riverbed

Overview

Sediments and their transport are imperative to the health of river systems. The complexity of sediment transport is characterised by a series of mechanisms, which depend on a large number of parameters. Gravel-bed rivers are the most prevalent river types in New Zealand. When a gravel-bed river is supplied with and transports grains of a wide range of sizes, sorting mechanisms take place on the riverbed.

The project aims to shed more light into how a complex gravel-bed topography, such as an armour layer and its associated stages of development and destruction, interacts with the near-bed turbulence at the grain scale.

Work is carried out in our laboratory. We are also able to obtain data in the field.

https://youtu.be/_bqDE7W5k6E

Acknowledgements
The research is being conducted under Marsden Fund contract UOA1412, administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand.

Comments are closed.