Sediment Characterization in St. Alban's Bay, VT


TitleSediment Characterization in St. Alban's Bay, VT
Publication TypePoster
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsNethercutt, S, Manley, T, Manley, P
Conference Name2017 AGU (American Geophysical Union) Fall Meeting
Date Published2017/12
PublisherAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)
Conference LocationNew Orleans, LA
Abstract

St. Alban’s Bay within Lake Champlain is plagued with harmful algal blooms. With future intensification due to climate change, a multidisciplinary program (BREE-Basin Resilience to Extreme Events) was initiated in 2016. In order to assess the mobilization of harmful nutrients from sediment resuspension events and riverine input, 74 sediment samples were collected in a grid fashion throughout St. Alban’s Bay. Sediments were deflocculated and analyzed using a LA920 Horiba laser scattering particle size distribution analyzer to define the frequency of sediment sizes from clay to sand. Gridded surfaces of mean sortable silt percentage, silt percentage, sand percentage, and clay percentage were used to represent the sediment distribution of the region. A plot of diameter versus frequency showed the bimodal nature of some of the sediments, with one peak at about 10 microns diameter (silt) and the second at about 525 microns diameter (sand). The data showed an extremely low percentage of clay relative to that of sand and silt. The highest frequencies of sortable silt, which represents the most easily mobilized particle size, are found in the deepest areas of the bay, suggesting that these regions are where dominant bottom flow occurs. The high occurrence of sortable silt in the St. Alban’s Bay does suggest that sediment mobilization, and therefore nutrient mobilization has the potential to occur. These data combined with high-resolution multibeam and hydrodynamic data will allow for future models of water flow and remobilization studies in the future.

URLhttps://agu.confex.com/agu/fm17/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/285718
Status: 
Published
Attributable Grant: 
BREE
Grant Year: 
Year2
Acknowledged VT EPSCoR: 
Ack-Yes