Catalog Record

Data and Report from S&T Project 21015: Physical and Surrogate Data Collection of Sediment Transport in Ephemeral Systems

The Arroyo de los Pinos (ADLP) sediment research station was constructed in 2018 and continues to monitor flow and sediment flux whenever there are monsoons-based runoff events in the basin. The station is in Socorro, New Mexico. The associated instruments deploy automatically to monitor river stage, flow velocity, and bedload flux, which includes acoustic impacts as a surrogate for bedload, narrow-band and broad-band seismic sensors as a surrogate for bedload, suspended sediment concentration (SSC), and turbidity as a surrogate for SSC. Acoustic impact sensors have faced challenges at the ADLP. Notwithstanding, data from the impact sensors are calibrated to sediment flux with promising success. Fluvial seismology is a growing area of research, and the ADLP station and the Arroyo de los Montoyas are on the cutting edge. Non-contact deployments for surrogates are attractive due to reduced risks to human safety and sediment related equipment damage. Challenges are as prevalent with this technology as with any previous surrogate technologies. Continued investigations will indicate whether or not the value of the data and the reduced risk to personnel and equipment will outweigh the methods needed to overcome the challenges.
Generation Effort S&T Project 21015: Physical and Surrogate Data Collection of Sediment Transport in Ephemeral Systems
Themes Environmental
Tags Ephemeral Stream, Sediment Surrogate, Sediment Flux, Impact Sensors, Fluvial Seismology
Reclamation Project Rio Grande Project
Reclamation Program Science and Technology Program

Location Information

Location Description
Location Tags Rio Grande River Basin
Location Parent
State(s) New Mexico
Unified Region(s) Upper Colorado Basin
Timezone MT
Elevation 4,613 ft
Vertical Datum NAVD88
Coordinates (lat, long) See Location Details
Horizontal Datum WGS84