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Tidal sediment transport versus freshwater flood events in the Konkouré Estuary, Republic of Guinea
Authors:Sylvain Capo   Isabelle Brenon   Aldo Sottolichio   Patrice Castaing  Patrick Le Goulven
Affiliation:aLittoral, Environnement et SociétéS UMR 6250, Université de La Rochelle, 2 rue Olympe de Gouges, F-17000 La Rochelle, France;bEPOC UMR 5805 CNRS, Université de Bordeaux1, avenue des facultés, F-33000 Bordeaux, France;cIRD DIVHA, Maison des Sciences de l’eau, F-34000 Montpellier, France
Abstract:In comparison to their temperate counterparts, sediment processes in tropical estuaries are poorly known and especially in African ones. The hydrodynamics of such environments is controlled by a combination of multiple processes including morphology, salinity, mangrove vegetation, tidal processes, river discharge, settling and erosion of mud and by physico-chemical processes as well as sediment dynamics.The aim of this study is to understand the sediment processes in this transitional stage of the estuary when the balance between river discharges and marine processes is reversing. Studying the hydrodynamics and sediment dynamics of the Konkouré Estuary has recently been made possible thanks to new data on bathymetry, sedimentary cover, salinity, water elevations, and current velocities. The Lower Konkouré is a shallow, funnel shaped, mesotidal mangrove-fringed, tide-dominated estuary, well mixed during low river discharge and stratified during high river discharge. The Konkouré Estuary is turbid despite the small amount of terrestrial input and its residual velocity at the mouth during low river discharges, landwards for two of the three branches, suggests a landward migration by tidal pumping of the suspended particulate matter. A Turbidity Maximum Zone (TMZ) is identified for typical states of the estuary with regard to fluvial and tidal components. Suspended sediment transport during a transitional stage between the rainy and dry seasons is known thanks to current velocity and Suspended Sediment Concentration (SSC) measurements taken in November 2003. The Richardson layered number calculation assesses that turbulence is the major mixing process in the water column, at least during the flood and ebb stages, whereas stratification occurs during the slack water periods. Tidal currents generate bottom erosion, and turbulence mixes the suspended sediment throughout the water column. As a result, a net sediment input is calculated from the western Konkouré outlet for two consecutive tidal cycles. Despite the net water export, almost 300 tons per tide reach the estuary through this outlet, for a moderate river flow.
Keywords:Tidal pumping   Mesotidal estuary   Hydrodynamics   Sediment dynamics   Republic of Guinea
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