Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay

<p>Two multibeam sonar surveys of west-central San Francisco Bay, California, were conducted in 1997 and 2008. Bathymetric change analysis between the two surveys indicates a loss of 14.1 million cubic meters (-3.1 cm/yr) of sediment during this time period, representing an approximately three...

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Main Authors: Patrick Barnard, Rikk Kvitek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2010-09-01
Series:San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/6k3524hg
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spelling doaj-b87d0e56f6d242449587f0d966def6212020-11-24T22:25:17ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaSan Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science1546-23662010-09-0183ark:13030/qt6k3524hgAnthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco BayPatrick Barnard0Rikk Kvitek1U.S. Geological SurveyCalifornia State University, Monterey Bay<p>Two multibeam sonar surveys of west-central San Francisco Bay, California, were conducted in 1997 and 2008. Bathymetric change analysis between the two surveys indicates a loss of 14.1 million cubic meters (-3.1 cm/yr) of sediment during this time period, representing an approximately three-fold acceleration of the rate that was observed from prior depth change analysis from 1947 to 1979 for all of Central Bay, using more spatially coarse National Ocean Service (NOS) soundings. The portions of the overlapping survey areas between 1997 and 2008 designated as aggregate mining lease sites lost sediment at five times the rate of the remainder of west-central San Francisco Bay. Despite covering only 28% of the analysis area, volume change within leasing areas accounted for 9.2 million cubic meters of sediment loss, while the rest of the area lost 4.9 million cubic meters of sediment. The uncertainty of this recent analysis is more tightly constrained due to more stringent controls on vertical and horizontal position via tightly coupled, inertially aided differential Global Positioning Systems (GPS) solutions for survey vessel trajectory that virtually eliminate inaccuracies from traditional tide modeling and vessel motion artifacts. Further, quantification of systematic depth measurement error can now be calculated through comparison of static surfaces (e.g., bedrock) between surveys using seafloor habitat maps based on acoustic backscatter measurements and ground-truthing with grab samples and underwater video. Sediment loss in the entire San Francisco Bay Coastal System during the last half-century, as estimated from a series of bathymetric change studies, is 240 million cubic meters, and most of this is believed to be coarse sediment (i.e., sand and gravel) from Central Bay and the San Francisco Bar, which is likely to limit the sand supply to adjacent, open-coast beaches. This hypothesis is supported by a calibrated numerical model in a related study that indicates that there is a potential net export of sand-sized sediment across the Golden Gate, suggesting that a reduction in the supply of sand-sized sediment within west-central San Francisco Bay will limit transport to the outer coast.</p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/6k3524hgbathymetrymultibeam sonarestuaryanthropogenicdredgingaggregate miningsediment transportGeologyNatural Resources Management and PolicyMarine Biology and Biological OceanographyOther Earth SciencesOther Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Barnard
Rikk Kvitek
spellingShingle Patrick Barnard
Rikk Kvitek
Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
bathymetry
multibeam sonar
estuary
anthropogenic
dredging
aggregate mining
sediment transport
Geology
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Marine Biology and Biological Oceanography
Other Earth Sciences
Other Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
author_facet Patrick Barnard
Rikk Kvitek
author_sort Patrick Barnard
title Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
title_short Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
title_full Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
title_fullStr Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
title_full_unstemmed Anthropogenic Influence on Recent Bathymetric Change in West-Central San Francisco Bay
title_sort anthropogenic influence on recent bathymetric change in west-central san francisco bay
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
issn 1546-2366
publishDate 2010-09-01
description <p>Two multibeam sonar surveys of west-central San Francisco Bay, California, were conducted in 1997 and 2008. Bathymetric change analysis between the two surveys indicates a loss of 14.1 million cubic meters (-3.1 cm/yr) of sediment during this time period, representing an approximately three-fold acceleration of the rate that was observed from prior depth change analysis from 1947 to 1979 for all of Central Bay, using more spatially coarse National Ocean Service (NOS) soundings. The portions of the overlapping survey areas between 1997 and 2008 designated as aggregate mining lease sites lost sediment at five times the rate of the remainder of west-central San Francisco Bay. Despite covering only 28% of the analysis area, volume change within leasing areas accounted for 9.2 million cubic meters of sediment loss, while the rest of the area lost 4.9 million cubic meters of sediment. The uncertainty of this recent analysis is more tightly constrained due to more stringent controls on vertical and horizontal position via tightly coupled, inertially aided differential Global Positioning Systems (GPS) solutions for survey vessel trajectory that virtually eliminate inaccuracies from traditional tide modeling and vessel motion artifacts. Further, quantification of systematic depth measurement error can now be calculated through comparison of static surfaces (e.g., bedrock) between surveys using seafloor habitat maps based on acoustic backscatter measurements and ground-truthing with grab samples and underwater video. Sediment loss in the entire San Francisco Bay Coastal System during the last half-century, as estimated from a series of bathymetric change studies, is 240 million cubic meters, and most of this is believed to be coarse sediment (i.e., sand and gravel) from Central Bay and the San Francisco Bar, which is likely to limit the sand supply to adjacent, open-coast beaches. This hypothesis is supported by a calibrated numerical model in a related study that indicates that there is a potential net export of sand-sized sediment across the Golden Gate, suggesting that a reduction in the supply of sand-sized sediment within west-central San Francisco Bay will limit transport to the outer coast.</p>
topic bathymetry
multibeam sonar
estuary
anthropogenic
dredging
aggregate mining
sediment transport
Geology
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Marine Biology and Biological Oceanography
Other Earth Sciences
Other Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/6k3524hg
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