4.7 Article

Hydrodynamic evolutions at the Yangtze Estuary from 1998 to 2009

Journal

APPLIED OCEAN RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages 291-302

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apor.2014.06.009

Keywords

Yangtze Estuary; Hydrodynamic evolution; Deepwater Navigational Channel (DNC); Measurement analysis; Numerical modeling

Funding

  1. UNESCO-IHE Partnership Research Fund (UPaRF) [60038881]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41206072]
  3. Science & Technology Program of Ministry of Transport, China [2012329A06040]

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Over the past decade, the Yangtze Estuary has witnessed an unprecedented scale of human interventions and modifications through extensively varied resource utilizations. During the processes, mankind has obtained various resources and benefits via the golden waterway, such as navigation channel, harbor, shipping industry, shoreline, reclaimed land, freshwater and fishery resource. At the same time, the estuary and coast have also experienced a series of gradual changes in characteristics, such as sedimentation, erosion, sand hungry, water pollution, intertidal area loss, self-purification capacity decrease, and biological reduction. With the help of measurement data and numerical modeling, this study analyzed the response and feedback mechanisms between hydrodynamic evolutions and morphological processes in the Yangtze Estuary from 1998 to 2009. The results of this study indicate the following. (i) The water level along the main outlet of the Yangtze Estuary increased from 1998 to 2009. This increase was induced by the variation of the whole river regime (including natural geomorphodynamic process and local topography feedbacks from extreme metrological events and human activities). (ii) The decrease of the flow partition ratio at the 3rd bifurcation is directly induced by the Deepwater Navigational Channel (DNC) project and the corresponding morphological changes in the North Passage. (iii) The estuarine environmental gradients (salinity and suspended sediment concentration) were compressed, and the fresh-salt gradient became steeper. This has the indirect effect of backfilling in the waterway, i.e., strengthening the stratification effect near the ETM area and enhancing the tendency of up-estuary sediment transport. The results of this study give insights into explaining other phenomena such as deposition in the middle reach of the DNC, bathymetry evolutions, variations in vertical velocity and sediment concentration profiles, waterway backfilling and delta reclamation. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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