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Published July 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Flocculation State of Mud in the Lowermost Freshwater Reaches of the Mississippi River: Spatial Distribution of Sizes, Seasonal Changes, and Their Impact on Vertical Concentration Profiles

  • 1. ROR icon Virginia Tech
  • 2. ROR icon United States Department of Agriculture
  • 3. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 4. ROR icon United States Bureau of Reclamation
  • 5. ROR icon Texas Tech University

Abstract

We use in situ measurements of suspended mud to assess the flocculation state of the lowermost freshwater reaches of the Mississippi River. The goal of the study was to assess the flocculation state of the mud in the absence of seawater, the spatial distribution of floc sizes within the river, and to look for seasonal differences between summer and winter. We also examine whether measured floc sizes can explain observed vertical distributions of mud concentration through a Rouse profile analysis. Data were collected at the same locations during summer and winter at similar discharges and suspended sediment concentrations. Measurements showed that the mud in both seasons was flocculated and that the floc size could reasonably be represented by a cross‐sectional averaged value as sizes varied little over the flow depth or laterally across the river at a given station. Depth‐averaged floc sizes ranged from 75 to 200 microns and increased slightly moving downriver as turbulence levels dropped. On average, flocs were 40 microns larger during summer than in winter, likely due to enhanced microbial activity associated with warmer water. Floc size appeared to explain vertical variations in mud concentration profiles when the bed was predominately composed of sand. Average mud settling velocities for these cases ranged from 0.1 to 0.5 mm/s. However, Rouse‐estimated settling velocities ranged from 1 to 3 mm/s at two stations during winter where the bed was composed of homogeneous mud. These values exceeded the size‐based estimates of settling velocity.

Copyright and License

Acknowledgement

Funding for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation under EAR award 1801142, “Collaborative Research: Flocculation Dynamics in the Fluvial to Marine Transition.” Additional financial support for R.O. was provided by the Charles E. Via, Jr. Endowment at Virginia Tech and the New Horizons Graduate Scholars Program. We are also grateful to the USACE Bonnet Carré Spillway Office for operational support. Three anonymous reviewers and the editor Ton Hoitink provided helpful comments and critiques of the manuscript; we are grateful for their efforts.

Funding

Funding for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation under EAR award 1801142, “Collaborative Research: Flocculation Dynamics in the Fluvial to Marine Transition.” Additional financial support for R.O. was provided by the Charles E. Via, Jr. Endowment at Virginia Tech and the New Horizons Graduate Scholars Program.

Data Availability

Raw data that support the findings of this study are publicly available online at https://github.com/FlocData/Data-Osborn-et-al-Mississippi (Strom et al., 2023).

Files

JGR Earth Surface - 2023 - Osborn - The Flocculation State of Mud in the Lowermost Freshwater Reaches of the Mississippi.pdf

Additional details

Created:
September 6, 2024
Modified:
October 25, 2024