TY - JOUR
T1 - Rapid reservoir erosion, hyperconcentrated flow, and downstream deposition triggered by breaching of 38 m tall Condit Dam, White Salmon River, Washington
AU - Wilcox, Andrew C.
AU - O'Connor, Jim E.
AU - Major, Jon J.
PY - 2014/6
Y1 - 2014/6
N2 - Condit Dam on the White Salmon River, Washington, a 38 m high dam impounding a large volume (1.8 million m3) of fine-grained sediment (60% sand, 35% silt and clay, and 5% gravel), was rapidly breached in October 2011. This unique dam decommissioning produced dramatic upstream and downstream geomorphic responses in the hours and weeks following breaching. Blasting a 5 m wide hole into the base of the dam resulted in rapid reservoir drawdown, abruptly releasing ~1.6 million m3 of reservoir water, exposing reservoir sediment to erosion, and triggering mass failures of the thickly accumulated reservoir sediment. Within 90-min of breaching, the reservoir's water and ~10% of its sediment had evacuated. At a gauging station 2.3-km downstream, flow increased briefly by 400-m3-s-1 during passage of the initial pulse of released reservoir water, followed by a highly concentrated flow phase - up to 32% sediment by volume - as landslide-generated slurries from the reservoir moved downstream. This hyperconcentrated flow, analogous to those following volcanic eruptions or large landslides, draped the downstream river with predominantly fine sand. During the ensuing weeks, suspended-sediment concentration declined and sand and gravel bed load derived from continued reservoir erosion aggraded the channel by->1-m at the gauging station, after which the river incised back to near its initial elevation at this site. Within 15-weeks after breaching, over 1 million m3 of suspended load is estimated to have passed the gauging station, consistent with estimates that->60% of the reservoir's sediment had eroded. This dam removal highlights the influence of interactions among reservoir erosion processes, sediment composition, and style of decommissioning on rate of reservoir erosion and consequent downstream behavior of released sediment.
AB - Condit Dam on the White Salmon River, Washington, a 38 m high dam impounding a large volume (1.8 million m3) of fine-grained sediment (60% sand, 35% silt and clay, and 5% gravel), was rapidly breached in October 2011. This unique dam decommissioning produced dramatic upstream and downstream geomorphic responses in the hours and weeks following breaching. Blasting a 5 m wide hole into the base of the dam resulted in rapid reservoir drawdown, abruptly releasing ~1.6 million m3 of reservoir water, exposing reservoir sediment to erosion, and triggering mass failures of the thickly accumulated reservoir sediment. Within 90-min of breaching, the reservoir's water and ~10% of its sediment had evacuated. At a gauging station 2.3-km downstream, flow increased briefly by 400-m3-s-1 during passage of the initial pulse of released reservoir water, followed by a highly concentrated flow phase - up to 32% sediment by volume - as landslide-generated slurries from the reservoir moved downstream. This hyperconcentrated flow, analogous to those following volcanic eruptions or large landslides, draped the downstream river with predominantly fine sand. During the ensuing weeks, suspended-sediment concentration declined and sand and gravel bed load derived from continued reservoir erosion aggraded the channel by->1-m at the gauging station, after which the river incised back to near its initial elevation at this site. Within 15-weeks after breaching, over 1 million m3 of suspended load is estimated to have passed the gauging station, consistent with estimates that->60% of the reservoir's sediment had eroded. This dam removal highlights the influence of interactions among reservoir erosion processes, sediment composition, and style of decommissioning on rate of reservoir erosion and consequent downstream behavior of released sediment.
KW - dam removal
KW - hyperconcentrated flow
KW - landslide
KW - reservoir erosion
KW - sediment transport
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84904707661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/2013JF003073
DO - 10.1002/2013JF003073
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84904707661
SN - 2169-9003
VL - 119
SP - 1376
EP - 1394
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
IS - 6
ER -