2000
DOI: 10.1672/0277-5212(2000)020[0219:slaaia]2.0.co;2
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Sediment loads and accumulation in a small riparian wetland system in northern Missouri

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Cited by 43 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Whereas Asselman and Middelkoop (1995) proposed the distribution of traps according to a systematic grid design and Kronvang et al (1998) distributed traps along floodplain transects, other researchers have sampled using a more deterministic design based upon, for example, different morphological, topographical and land use settings (e.g. Walling and Bradley, 1989;Simm, 1995;Heimann and Roell, 2000;Steiger and Gurnell, 2003). Furthermore, although some studies have used a composite of approaches to estimate sedimentation rates, with the exception of the study by Mansikkaniemi (1985), there have been few explicit attempts to compare results from different techniques or to make recommendations concerning appropriate methodologies.…”
Section: Sampling Designs and Methods: Some Comparisonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Whereas Asselman and Middelkoop (1995) proposed the distribution of traps according to a systematic grid design and Kronvang et al (1998) distributed traps along floodplain transects, other researchers have sampled using a more deterministic design based upon, for example, different morphological, topographical and land use settings (e.g. Walling and Bradley, 1989;Simm, 1995;Heimann and Roell, 2000;Steiger and Gurnell, 2003). Furthermore, although some studies have used a composite of approaches to estimate sedimentation rates, with the exception of the study by Mansikkaniemi (1985), there have been few explicit attempts to compare results from different techniques or to make recommendations concerning appropriate methodologies.…”
Section: Sampling Designs and Methods: Some Comparisonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Baumann et al (1984) spread out a white-clay marker horizon on the Mississippi deltaic plain to examine deposition rates four times per year during a two year period. Of the studies reviewed, the marker medium that seems to have been most widely used for investigating sedimentation in coastal marshes (Cahoon and Turner, 1989;Reed, 1992;Cahoon and Reed, 1995), riparian wetlands (Hupp and Bazemore, 1993;Heimann and Roell, 2000) and bottomland hardwood wetlands (Kleiss, 1996) is feldspar clay pads. This approach has the advantage that the pre-event surface is clearly marked and that the marker has negligible influence on the hydraulic resistance of the surface for which sedimentation rates are estimated.…”
Section: Artificial Marker Horizonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A multiple regression analysis of information from a bottomland hardwood wetland in Arkansas, USA, by Kleiss (1996) suggested that, from a range of possible physical and biological explanatory variables, 90% of the variation in sedimentation rates was accounted for by three variables: distance from the river, flood duration and tree basal area. Furthermore, simple linear regression models, incorporating flood event, suspended-sediment load or streamflow characteristics as the independent variable, explained up to 82% of variability in median event sediment deposition within a riparian wetland in Missouri, USA (Heimann and Roell, 2000). The authors concluded that there was little apparent correlation between cumulative short-term deposition and site elevation, distance from the channel, distance along the channel, or fluvial landform type, and that this may be due to many factors including upstream channelization, floodplain complexity, the short duration of events.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Number of nodes per length of channel (Luck and others, 2010), or sinuosity times the number of nodes (Brown, 2002) Channel migration rate Measure channel migration from multiple sequential aerial photographs (Latterell and others, 2006) Bank erosion rate Where erosion rates are relatively low, bank pins can be used to monitor the erosion rate (Bull, 1997) Measure width of floodplain and bankfull channel in the field or from aerial photography (Rosgen, 1994;Beechie and others, 2006) Aggradation rate Measure channel aggradation with repeat cross section surveys, GPS surveys, or LiDAR surveys (Wheaton and others, 2010a,b), or with sediment deposition plates (Kleiss, 1996;Heimann and Roell, 2000) Restore channel cross section Channel geometry (bankfull width, bankfull depth, width/depth ratio)…”
Section: Geomorphic Monitoring Parameters and Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%