HS2.4/GM3.4

Sediment transfer and transit time across scales: tracing, budgetting and modelling (co-organized)
Convener: Marcel van der Perk  | Co-Conveners: Katerina Michaelides , Rolf Aalto , Andreas Krein , John Quinton 
Oral Programme
 / Thu, 06 May, 13:30–15:00  / Room 34
Poster Programme
 / Attendance Thu, 06 May, 17:30–19:00  / Hall A

A proper understanding and prediction of movement and transfer of sediment and associated nutrients and contaminants through river basins is indispensable for an adequate management of sediment quantity and quality. Despite the substantial progress that has recently been made in the measurement and modelling of erosion and deposition of sediments on hillslopes, in the river channel network, and on floodplains, it remains difficult to predict the fate of sediments at the river basin scale. This session aims to bring together hydrologists, geomorphologists, and soil scientists working on fine to coarse sediment transfers at spatial scales from small catchments to large river basins and at time scales from storm events to centuries. This session solicits contributions that examine the amounts and rates of transfers and storage of sediments and associated nutrients and contaminants in the various compartments of the fluvial system from hillslopes to estuaries. Abstracts that address transfers of sediment between river basin compartments, sediment retention time within the compartments, or transit times of sediment in river basins are especially welcome.

Invited Presentations:

Mark Macklin (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Catchment-scale environmental controls of sediment-associated contaminant dispersal

Adrian Collins (Environment Group, ADAS, UK)
Sourcing sediment loss to watercourses at catchment scale using a novel tracing-tracking framework

Christian France-Lanord (Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques, Nancy, France)
Transfer and evolution of sediments in the Gangetic plain

Francesc Gallart (Institute of Earth Sciences Jaume Almera , Barcelona, Spain)
Analysing sediment generation and transfer in a small Mediterranean mountain basin using a 15-year data period