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River Flow 2016 International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics July 12–15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA Co-organized by: IIHR — Hydroscience & Engineering University of Iowa Ven Te Chow Hydrosystems Laboratory University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Saint Louis University in collaboration with the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center (NGRREC) at Alton, Illinois

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Page 1: River Flow 2016 - IIHR...River Flow 2016 International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics July 12–15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA Co-organized by: IIHR— Hydroscience & Engineering University

River Flow 2016International Conference

on Fluvial Hydraulics

July 12– 15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA

Co-organized by:

IIHR — Hydroscience & Engineering University of Iowa

Ven Te Chow Hydrosystems Laboratory University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Saint Louis University

in collaboration with the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center

(NGRREC) at Alton, Illinois

NGRREC

Hydroscience & Engineering

Page 2: River Flow 2016 - IIHR...River Flow 2016 International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics July 12–15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA Co-organized by: IIHR— Hydroscience & Engineering University

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Contents

2 Welcome to River Flow 2016

3 Organization

4 International Scientific Committee

5 IAHR Committee on Fluvial Hydraulics

6 General Conference Information

8 Presentation Guidelines

9 Keynote Lectures

10 Master Classes and Short Courses

11 Conference Program Overview

14 Detailed Conference Program 14 — Tuesday, July 12 30 — Wednesday, July 13 45 — Thursday, July 14

60 Technical Tour

62 Maps, Floor Plans, and Directions

NGRREC

Organizers, Sponsors, and Exhibitors

Page 3: River Flow 2016 - IIHR...River Flow 2016 International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics July 12–15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA Co-organized by: IIHR— Hydroscience & Engineering University

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On behalf of the IAHR Committee on Fluvial Hydraulics, it is my pleasure to welcome you to River Flow 2016—the Eighth International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics—held on the campus of Saint Louis University, St. Louis, USA.

The opportunity to hold the River Flow conference in the United States for the first time came at a particularly opportune time, given recent natural and anthropogenic disasters (e.g., floods), major ongoing river restoration initiatives, and present challenges related to the sustainable management of rivers. St. Louis, located on the western banks of the Mississippi River and close to the Missouri River, provides an excellent venue for a conference focusing on rivers.

The River Flow 2016 conference will highlight the latest advances in the experimental, computational, and theoretical approaches that can be used to deepen our understanding and capacity to predict flow and the associated fluid-driven ecological processes, anthropogenic influences, sediment transport, and morphodynamic processes.

In keeping with tradition, River Flow 2016 offers short courses and master classes presented by experts from different countries.

It is the strong belief of the members of the Local Organizing Committee that by providing a common forum for presentations and discussions, River Flow 2016 will foster interdisciplinary research and collaboration and rapid dissemination of latest findings, and provide an opportunity for discussion of how novel methods and techniques can be used interchangeably in various fields and application areas of river engineering and science.

— George Constantinescu, Conference Chair

Conference Chair: George Constantinescu Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UI

Conference Co-chairs:Marcelo Garcia Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, UIUC

Daniel Hanes Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, SLU

Dale Chapman Louis and Clark Community College and NGRREC

Local Organizing CommitteeLarry Weber, UI (chair) Jim Best, UIUC Edward Brauer, USACEAmanda Cox, SLUDavid Gordon, USACEWitold Krajewski, UI

UI: University of IowaUIUC: University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignSLU: Saint Louis UniversityNGRREC: National Great Rivers Research and Education Center at Alton, Ill.USACE: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

William Kruidenier, NGRRECMarian Muste, UI Garry Parker, UIUCMarcela Politano, UIBruce Rhoads, UIUC

Welcome to River Flow 2016 Organization

Page 4: River Flow 2016 - IIHR...River Flow 2016 International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics July 12–15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA Co-organized by: IIHR— Hydroscience & Engineering University

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• H. Abad, USA• J. Aberle, Norway• M. Altinakar, USA• A. Armanini, Italy• R. Balachandar, Canada• F. Ballio, Italy• S.J. Benett, USA• K. Blanckaert, Switzerland• R. Boes, Switzerland• F. Bombardelli, USA• D. Bousmar, Belgium• A. Cardoso, Portugal• H. Chanson, Australia• Y.M. Chiew, Singapore• V. Chu, Canada• E.A. Cowen, USA• A.M. da Silva, Canada• S. Dey, India• A. Dittrich, Germany• P. Diplas, USA• R. Ettema, USA• R. Falconer, UK• R. Ferreira, Portugal• H.J. Fernando, USA• M. Franca, Switzerland• J.H.W. Lee, Hong Kong• A. Leopardi, Italy• P. Goodwin, USA• M. Greco, Italy• W. Hager, Switzerland

• H. Havringa, The Netherlands• R. Hinkelmann, Germany• S.M. Hsu, Taiwan• P. Julien, USA• C. Keylock, UK• D. Lyn, USA• A. Marion, Italy• J.P. Martin-Vide, Spain• B. Melville, New Zealand• R. Murillo Munoz, Costa Rica• A.E. Mynett, The Netherlands• H. Nepf, USA• V. Nikora, UK• T. Papanicolaou, USA• A. Paquier, France• I. Popescu, The Netherlands• P. Roberts, USA• J.F. Rodríguez, Australia• P. Rutschmann, Germany• B. Sanders, USA• S. Soares-Frazao, Belgium• A. Schleiss, Switzerland• Y. Shimizu, Japan• A. Sukhodolov, Germany• M. Sumner, Denmark• W. Uijttewaal, The Netherlands• Z. Wang, China• S. Wieprecht, Germany• Y. Zech, Belgium

International Scientific Committee

• A. Dittrich, chair• J.F. Rodriguez, vice chair• M. Altinakar, past chair• A. Paquier, member• A. Leopardi, member• S. Soares-Frazao, member• S. Dey, member• M. Shu, member• M. Franca, co-opted member• G. Constantinescu, co-opted member• R. Ferreira, co-opted member

IAHR Committee on Fluvial Hydraulics

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Most conference activities will take place in the Busch Student Center on the Saint Louis University (SLU) campus, located fairly close to downtown St. Louis.

Opening ceremonies, closing ceremonies, and all invited plenary talks will be held in the Saint Louis Room of the Busch Student Center. The Conference Registration and Information Desk will be open Monday afternoon from 2 – 5 pm, and Tuesday through Thursday from 7:45 am – 6 pm. The Conference Registration and Information Desk is located on the first floor of the Busch Student Center outside of Room 170.

Participants who booked on-campus rooms will be housed in Marchetti Tower West (see SLU campus map). They can check in at the building starting 3 pm on Sunday, July 10, depending on their reservation.

The Master Classes and Short Courses will take place on Monday in Ritter Hall on the SLU campus, not far from the Busch Student Center. Participants in the Master Classes and Short Courses will have the opportunity to register on Monday morning near the rooms where the classes will be held. An informal dinner is planned on Monday evening at 7 pm for participants.

Lunch and coffee breaks are offered to all registered participants. All registered participants and their registered accompanying guests are invited to attend the Welcoming Reception on Tuesday evening at 7 pm and the Conference Banquet on Thursday evening at 7 pm. The Conference Banquet will take place at the Chase Park Plaza Hotel. Transportation will be available from the Busch Student Center to the banquet. There are no lunch or banquet vouchers. However, the conference participants should wear their name badges, provided at the Conference Registration and Information Desk, at all times.

Participants who registered early and expressed interest in the conference tour on Friday will receive a voucher ticket for the tour with their registration materials. Because of limited boat capacity, we had to limit the number of tour participants.

The Busch Student Center is equipped with free wireless connection. All guests must agree to SLU’s acceptable use policy. To access the internet on your device, do the following:

• Select the “sluguest” network.

• Wait for your device’s browser to open to the University Policy Acceptance page. Individual device settings and pop-up blockers may prevent the device from launching the Acceptance page. If this occurs, open the device’s internet browser manually and try to navigate to a new website. This generally forces the Acceptance Page to appear.

• If you are unable to connect to sluguest, please contact the ITS Customer Service Desk at 314-977-4000.

Customers on the sluguest network must accept the acceptable use agreement every eight hours or their device will be disconnected from the network.

General Conference InformationGeneral Conference Information

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If your paper was chosen as a Poster Presentation, please take note of these guidelines:

• All posters will be placed in Wool Ballroom 172, where supports for the posters will be available.

• Please display your poster as soon as possible.

• This room is adjacent to the site for coffee breaks.

• A special poster session is scheduled on Tuesday from 3:55–4:55 pm. Please plan to attend so you can answer questions from participants. Posters will be displayed throughout the three days of the conference.

If your paper was chosen for Oral Presentation, please follow these guidelines:

• Please consult the Detailed Conference Program to find out when your paper is scheduled for presentation. We have a full program, so it is essential that your presentation lasts no more than 12 minutes, with three additional minutes for questions from the audience.

• Please upload your presentation in Room 351 (Conference Secretariat Room), where several PCs/laptops are available.

• Please upload your PowerPoint presentation at least 1.5 hours in advance in the folder that corresponds with your session. This will allow time for us to upload them in the room where your session is scheduled (see floor maps for Busch Student Center). Students will be there to assist you.

• Please verify that any animations in your presentation work correctly.

• Save your presentation in the PowerPoint 97-2003 format. If you have use a newer version of PowerPoint, you can resave your presentation as a PowerPoint 97-2003 file.

• Prof. Mustafa Altinakar, University of Mississippi “Dam Safety in the USA and Numerical Dam-break Modeling for Decision Support in Critical Infrastructure Protection”

• Prof. Edwin Cowen, Cornell University “Exploiting Turbulence Metrics and Secondary Flows in Straight River Reaches and Open Channels”

• Prof. Gerald Galloway, University of Maryland “Mark Twain, the Mississippi, and ‘Modern’ River Engineering”

• Prof. Peter Goodwin, University of Idaho “Science to Inform Resilient Management of Rivers in a Changing World”

• Prof. Willi Hager, ETH Zurich “Erosion Processes of River Dikes”

• Prof. Ellen Wohl, Colorado State University “Messy Rivers are Healthy Rivers: The Importance of Physical Complexity in River Ecosystems”

Presentation Guidelines Keynote Lectures

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The Master Classes and Short Courses start on Monday at 9 am. Registration begins at 8:30 am near the rooms where the classes will be held in Ritter Hall (Rooms 120, 216, 229, 231, 249) on the SLU campus. Lunch and an informal dinner will be provided in the Sinquefield Stateroom in DuBourg Hall across the street from Ritter Hall. Dinner will be at 7 pm.

• Modern field measurement techniques (Short course) organizers: M. Garcia, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; F. Engel, K. Oberg, & P. Jackson, USGS, USA

• Mechanics of sediment transport and morphodynamics (Master Class) masters: A.M. da Silva, Queen’s University, Canada, and Rui Ferreira, Technical University Lisbon, Portugal

• Numerical modeling of unsteady flows over fixed and mobile beds (Master Class) masters: M. Altinakar, University of Mississippi, and S. Soares Frazao, University Catholique, Louvain, Belgium

• Vegetated flows (Master Class) masters: H. Nepf, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and A. Sukhodolov, Freshwater Ecology Institute, IGB, Berlin, Germany

• Turbulence and mixing processes (Master Class) masters: W. Uijttewaal, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, and G. Constantinescu, University of Iowa, USA

Monday, July 11

9 am – noon Master Classes / Short Courses (Ritter Hall)

Noon – 1:30 pm Lunch for Participants (Sinquefield Stateroom in DuBourg Hall)

1:30 – 4:30 pm Master Classes / Short Courses

7 – 9 pm Dinner for Participants (Sinquefield Stateroom in DuBourg Hall)

Tuesday, July 12

8:15 – 9 am Opening Ceremony (Saint Louis Room, Busch Center)

9 – 9:50 am Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. J. Galloway

9:50 – 10:15 am Coffee Break (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

10:15 am – noon Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

Noon – 1:15 pm Lunch (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

1:15 – 2:05 pm Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. E. Wohl

2:10 – 3:55 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

3:55 – 4:55 pm Poster Session (Wool Ballroom 172; coffee will be served)

5 – 6:30 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

7 pm – Welcoming Reception (Center for Global Citizenship)

Conference Program OverviewMaster Classes & Short Courses

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Wednesday, July 13

8:15 – 9:05 am Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. E. Cowen

9:15 – 11 am Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

11:10 am – 12:55 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

12:55 – 2:10 pm Lunch (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

2:10 – 3 pm Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. P. Goodwin

3 – 3:40 pm Coffee Break (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

3:40 – 5:40 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

6 pm – IAHR Fluvial Hydraulics Committee Meeting (Room 251ab)

Young Professionals Meeting (Room 253ad)

Flood Risk Management Technical Committee Meeting (Room 352/353)

River Experiment Centre of the kict [Andong, South Korea] Meeting (Wool Ballroom 173)

Thursday, July 14

8:15 – 9:05 am Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. W. Hager

9:15 – 11 am Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

11:10 am – 12:55 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

12:55 – 2:10 pm Lunch (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

2:10 – 3 pm Invited Plenary Lecture Prof. M. Altinakar

3 – 3:40 pm Coffee Break (Wool Ballroom 170 – 171)

3:40 – 5:10 pm Regular and Special Sessions (four parallel sessions)

5:30 – 6 pm Closing Ceremony (Saint Louis Room)

7 pm – Conference Dinner (transportation provided to The Chase Park Plaza)

Friday, July 15

Conference Technical Tour (for participants with tour tickets only)

Conference Program OverviewConference Program Overview

• All regular sessions, invited lectures, and the opening and closing ceremonies will be held in the Busch Student Center.

• All invited plenary lectures will take place in Saint Louis Room.

• All lunches and coffee breaks will be held in Wool Ballroom 170-171.

• Authors should upload presentations in Room 351 of the Busch Student Center, where the Conference Secretariat is located.

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8:15–9:50 am OPENING CEREMONY—Saint Louis Room Chaired by G. Constantinescu, M. Garcia, and D. Hanes

8:15 am WELCOME ADDRESS G. Constantinescu (River Flow 2016 conference chair) N. Brickhouse (Provost, Saint Louis University) A. Dittrich (Fluvial Hydraulics IAHR Committee Chair)

9 am INVITED PLENARY LECTURE Mark Twain, the Mississippi, and “Modern” River Engineering Prof. Gerald Galloway, University of Maryland (3)

9:50–10:15 am COFFEE BREAK—Wool Ballroom 170-171 10:15 am–noon PARALLEL SESSIONS

10:15 am–noon ENVIRONMENTAL ROLE OF HYDRAULIC INTERFACES — Room 352/353 Chaired by F. Ballio and J. Aberle

10:15 am The mechanics of bedload particles deposition over gravel beds M. Cecchetto, S. Tait, M. Tregnaghi, and A. Marion (263)

10:30 am The relationship between gas transfer velocity and surface divergence in open-channel with strip roughness M. Sanjou, T. Okamoto, and S. Gotou (265)

10:45 am Modeling of nutrient dynamics and vegetation succession, and comparison between with and without riverbed geomorphological simulation H. Itoh, S. Yamauchi, M. Sugano, K. Sanjaya, and T. Asaeda (268)

11 am Erosional strength in fine sediment mixtures with organic content: Observations from laboratory studies I. Seco, M. Zaramella, A. Marion, and S. Tait

11:15 am Post-processing of particle tracking data for phenomenological depiction of weak bed-load sediment transport S.A. Hosseini-Sadabadi, A. Radice, and F. Ballio (273)

11:30 am Assessment of the nutrient removal effectiveness of free water surface wetlands with different configurations N. Sabokrouhiyeh, A. Bottacin-Busolin, and A. Marion (275)

11:45 am Resistance and boundary shear in a partly obstructed channel flow M. Ben Meftah, F. De Serio, D. Malcangio, and M. Mossab (277)

Tu, 7/12: Opening, Plenary Lecture, Coffee Break Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

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10:15 am–noon EXPERIMENTAL TECHNIQUES USED IN FLUVIAL HYDRAULICS 1—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by M. Greco and J. Le Coz

10:15 am A toolbox for laser Doppler velocimetry data post-processing R. Aleixo, E. Carvalho, and R. Ferreira (123)

10:30 am Non-intrusive laboratory measurements of flow velocity in open-channel transitions D. Ram Thapa, S. Samuel Li, and A.S. Ramamurthy (127)

10:45 am Experimental evaluation of the friction slope in unsteady flows S. Soares-Frazão and I. Fent (129)

11 am Methods to assess drag force in flow through irregularly arranged roughness elements S. Niewerth, K. Koll, S. Asher, S. Moltchanov, and U. Shavit (131)

11:15 am Good, bad, and the ugly: Seasonal filtering and Autoregressive Moving Average (ARMA) models for detecting and replacing spikes in velocimetric profile data S. Dilling and B.J. MacVicar (133)

11:30 am Digital image-based technique for monitoring surface velocity: sensitivity analysis with processing parameters using data of a study case D. Termini and A. Di Leonardo (135)

11:45 am A method for identifying boundary interference in PADV data M.E. Ursic, D.G. Wren, and E.J. Langendoen (137)

10:15 am–noon DYNAMICS OF BEDFORMS AND MEANDERING STREAMS—Room 251 ab Chaired by A.M. da Silva and S.H. Hsu

10:15 am Modeling migration of alternating bars by both flume experiments and 2-D simulation S.-H.M. Hsu, N.-H. Chang, R.-K. Lin, Y.-H. Chang, and P.-F. Hung (377)

10:30 am Dune and alternate bar detection in a laboratory flume using a 3-D laser scanner T.V. de Ruijsscher, S. Dinnissen, B. Vermeulen, P. Hazenberg, and A.J.F. Hoitink (379)

10:45 am Application of rough-wall corrections for the k-ω SST model for the simulation of flow over fluvial dunes P. Grover and A.M. Ferreira da Silva (381)

11 am Hydraulic modeling of braided channels self-formed in an alluvial plain R. Ettema, D.L. Armstrong, C.I. Thornton, S.A. Hughes, and S.R. Abt (385)

11:15 am Flume experiments and linear stability analyses on the alternate bar formation and profile under non- uniform sediment condition M. Yano, S. Yamaguchi. Y. Hirai, and Y. Watanabe (387)

11:30 am Reproducing natural levee formation in an experimental flume T. Branß, A. Dittrich, and F. Núñez-González (390)

11:45 am Using bedform migration and orientation to infer sediment transport pathways in a sandy braided river C.A. Unsworth, A.P. Nicholas, P.J. Ashworth, C.J. Simpson, J.L. Best, D.R. Parsons, and G.H. Sambrook Smith (394)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

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10:15–11:45 am SUSTAINABLE ENGINEERING SOLUTIONS FOR MANAGEMENT OF NATURAL STREAMS Room 253ad Chaired by D. Bousmar and S. Soares-Frazao

10:15 am The role of 3-D hydraulics in habitat modeling of hydropeaking events G.R. Pisaturo, M. Righetti, M. Dumbser, M. Noack, M. Schneider, I. Kopecki, and V. Cavedon (683)

10:30 am Computational improvement to the spatial resolution of an aquatic systems model F.P. Maciel, J.C. Quijano, M.H. Garcia, and A. Vitale (685)

10:45 am Simulation of the vegetation state and flow regime interaction in the Macquarie Marshes S.G. Sandi, J.F. Rodriguez, P.M. Saco, L. Wen, and N. Saintilan (688)

11 am Availability of water during dry periods: A methodology combining 1-dimensional flow models and statistics H.G. Tuin, H.G. Voortman, and J.A.H. Kabout (690)

11:15 am Use of repeat surveys and flow and sediment transport modeling to support fish spawning reef placement in the Detroit River, Mich. P. Kinzel, J. Nelson, G. Kennedy, and D. Bennion (698)

11:30 am Modeling the LA River: Threats and opportunities for the Los Angeles River, USA T. Lassche, R.M.J. Schielen, and D.C.M. Augustijn (700)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session Tu, 7/12: Lunch, Plenary Lecture

Noon–1:15 pm LUNCH BREAK—Wool Ballroom 170-171

1:15–2:05 pm INVITED PLENARY LECTURE—Saint Louis Room Messy rivers are healthy rivers: The importance of physical complexity in river ecosystems Prof. Ellen Wohl, Colorado State University (14)

2:10–3:55 pm PARALLEL SESSIONS

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2:10–3:55 pm BUOYANCY-DRIVEN FLOWS 1—Room 352/353 Chaired by C. Adduce and M. Franca

2:10 pm A numerical study of the effect of bed slope angle on the structure of gravity currents propagating over an incline K. Steenhauer, T. Tokyay, and G. Constantinescu (285)

2:25 pm Gravity current head simulation by Lagrangian advection of blocks V.H. Chu and W. Altai (287)

2:40 pm LES investigation on entrainment in gravity currents L. Ottolenghi, C. Adduce, R. Inghilesi, V. Armenio, and F. Roman (289)

2:55 pm Large-eddy simulations of bubble plumes with and without crossflow B. Fraga, E. Mitrou, and T. Stoesser ( 293)

3:10 pm Laboratory experiments on the generation and the breaking of internal solitary waves G. La Forgia, C. Adduce, and F. Falcini (295)

3:25 pm Effect of surface waves on full depth lock exchange gravity currents hydrodynamics A. Viviano, R.E. Musumeci, and E. Foti (297)

3:40 pm Scour protection by collar plates: A parametric study B. Setia and S. Singh (170)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

2:10–3:55 pm EXPERIMENTAL TECHNIQUES USED IN FLUVIAL HYDRAULICS 2—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by M. Greco and I. Fujita

2:10 pm Image analysis of open-channel flow with sparsely distributed strip roughness in very shallow water condition accompanying three dimensional and time- dependent large surface deformations K. Tani, I. Fujita, and Y. Notoya (139)

2:25 pm Evaluation of the accuracy of a bed casting technique C.U. Navaratnam, J. Aberle, and S.M. Spiller (142)

2:40 pm Turbulence towers, finally the ability to practically, economically, and accurately measure the turbulence structure and more in rivers J.E.C. Nielsen and D.P. Callaghan (144)

2:55 pm Measuring bathymetric evolution in mobile-bed laboratory flumes A. Vargas-Luna, J.A. Angel Escobar, E.M.J. Stierman, B.G.H. Gorte, and W.S.J. Uijttewaal (146)

3:10 pm Challenges of dike breach hydraulics P.-J. Frank and W.H. Hager (152)

3:25 pm Before the dam breaks: Analysis of the flow behind a downward moving gate R. Aleixo, S. Soares-Frazão, and Y. Zech (154)

3:40 pm Measurements of flow dynamics associated with interacting, subaqueous barchans: Exploring bedform asymmetry and three-dimensionality in a novel flume environment N. Bristow, G. Blois, Z. Tang, J.M. Barros, J. Best, and K.T. Christensen (156)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

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2:10–3:55 pm APPLICATIONS OF HYDRO-ACOUSTICS TO RIVER MORPHODYNAMICS 1—Room 251 ab Chaired by D. Hanes, S. Wright, and M. Detert

2:10 pm Validation of observed bedload transport pathways using morphodynamic modeling A. Mineault-Guitard, C.D. Rennie, and R.D. Williams (514)

2:25 pm Stochasticity of riverbed backscattering, with implications for acoustical classification of non-cohesive sediment using multibeam sonar D. Buscombe and P.E. Grams (516)

2:40 pm Visualization analysis and acoustic Doppler current profiler measurements by using the acoustic Doppler current profiler river flow analyzer H.-W. Wang, S.-C. Li, J.-H. Hong, C.-H. Chen, & Y.-C. Wang (518)

2:55 pm Long-term continuous acoustical suspended-sediment measurements in rivers—Theory, evaluation, and results from 14 stations on five rivers D.J. Topping, S.A. Wright, R.E. Griffiths, and D.J. Dean (520)

3:10 pm Calibration of sediment-generated noise measured using hydrophones to bedload transport in the Trinity River M.D. Marineau, S.A. Wright, and D. Gaeuman (523)

3:25 pm Multi-frequency acoustic inversion derived from a broad and shifting grain size distribution using “off-the- shelf” acoustic Doppler current profilers D.W. Haught, J.G. Venditti, S.A. Wright, and M. Church (525)

3:40 pm Measurement of bedform migration rates on the Lower Missouri River in Missouri, USA, using repeat measurements with a multibeam echosounder C.M. Elliott and R.B. Jacobson (527)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

2:10–3:55 pm RIVER MORPHOLOGY AND MORPHODYNAMICS 1 Room 253 ad Chaired by A.J. Schleiss and R. Schielen

2:10 pm The influence of the opening width of check dams on bedload continuity of mountain rivers S. Schwindt, M.J. Franca, and A.J. Schleiss (401)

2:25 pm Preliminary morphodynamic results on the impact of the High Aswan Dam on the Nile River, Egypt B.M. Al-Zaidi, E. Viparelli, and A. Moussa (405)

2:40 pm Large-scale morphodynamics structures in the Arc en Maurienne River (France) F. Cordier, P. Tassi, M. Jodeau, and B. Camenen (407)

2:55 pm Dynamic vs. quasi-steady modeling of morphodynamic processes: A physics-based selection criterion C.F. Castro-Bolinaga, P. Diplas, and R.J. Bodnar (409)

3:10 pm Regional sediment management of watersheds, reservoirs, and rivers J. Shelley, P. Boyd, and L. Lillycrop (412)

3:25 pm Effect of hydrograph shape on the morphological response of alluvial stream beds E. Haley Gunsolus and A.D. Binns (417)

3:40 pm Hydro- and morphodynamics of riffle-pool sequences in the middle Elwha River, Washington, USA J.A. Morgan and P.A. Nelson (419)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

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5–6:15 pm BUOYANCY-DRIVEN FLOWS 2 Room 352/353 Chaired by C. Adduce and M. Franca

5 pm Bed shear stress estimation for gravity currents performed in laboratory J. Zordan, A.J. Schleiss, and M.J. Franca (299)

5:15 pm Photometric velocity tracking tool for laboratory generated turbidity currents R.I. Wilson, H. Friedrich, and C. Stevens (301)

5:30 pm Models for effective sluicing of turbidity-currents in reservoirs C.J. Sloff, A. Commandeur, and J.-C. Yang (303)

5:45 pm Turbidity currents generated by bank failure under wave erosion Y. Ozeren and M. Altinakar (308)

6 pm Combined PIV-LIF measurements and numerical modeling of stratified flows over a dune and an array of dunes J. Anta, M.A. Regueiro-Picallo, L. Cea, and E. Peña (312)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

3:55–4:55 pm POSTER SESSION—Wool Ballroom 172

Tu, 7/12: Poster Session

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5–6:30 pm EXPERIMENTAL TECHNIQUES USED IN FLUVIAL HYDRAULICS 3—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by C. di Cristo and M. Greco

5 pm An experiment on turbulent intensities and their contribution to the turbulent kinetic energy in the open channel bend A. Farhadi, C. Sindelar, M. Tritthart, M. Glas, and H. Habersack (163)

5:15 pm Experimental investigation of embankment erosion during fast geomorphic processes M. Greco, C. Di Cristo, S. Evangelista, A. Leopardi, M. Iervolino, and A. Vacca (168)

5:30 pm Experiments and modeling of density instabilities driven by interface shear and their influence on removal of sediment from buoyant plumes M. Rouhnia, K. Strom, and X. Liu (173)

5:45 pm Longitudinal distribution of bed shear stress in stabilized scoured hole at the downstream of the river bed protection S.W. Park, H.C. Park, and J.H. Hwang (176)

6 pm Experimental study on effects of mid-bar to lateral migration—Preliminary study Z. Zamri, J. Ariffin, J. Abdullah, and A.N.A. Ali (180)

6:15 pm Stream-scale experiments on vegetated flows: Flow measurement and analysis U. Ji, J. Kang, Y. Ryu, S.H. Jung, W.E. Penning, V. Harezlak, K.D. Berends, and C.-L. Jang (182)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

5–6:30 pm APPLICATIONS OF HYDRO-ACOUSTICS TO RIVER MORPHODYNAMICS 2—Room 251 ab Chaired by D. Hanes, S. Wright, and B. MacVicar

5 pm Multibeam surveying of river bed form and bed-load estimation at medium flow condition in a large sand river: Preliminary results of a field study in Po River L. Schippa, I. Galvani, L. Crose, and S. Pavan (529)

5:15 pm Sediment concentration measurements using ADCPs in a large river: Evaluation of acoustic frequency and grain size R.N. Szupiany, C. Lopez Weibel, F. Latosinski, L. Dominguez Ruben, M. Amsler, and M. Guerrero (531)

5:30 pm Development of a system to measure bed forms and vertical velocity profiles in a river channel H. Koseki, A. Yorozuya, S. Kudo, Y. Iwami, and T. Kitsuda (534)

5:45 pm Acoustic signal propagation and measurement in natural stream channels for application to surrogate bed load measurements: Halfmoon Creek, Colorado J.R. Rigby, D. Wren, and N. Murray (537)

6 pm Velocity mapping toolbox for Sontek M9 ADCP data G.P. Tomas, R. Hopker, A.L. Frigo, and T. Bleninger (539)

6:15 pm Acoustic mapping velocimetry (AMV) for in-situ bedload transport estimation S. Baranya, M. Muste, D. Abraham, and T.C. Pratt (542)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session

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5–6:30 pm RIVER MORPHOLOGY AND MORPHODYNAMICS 2 Room 253 ad Chaired by R. Ettema and K. Koll

5 pm Downstream coarsening on the Missouri River S. Gibson, J. Shelley, and C. Cai (421)

5:15 pm Experimental assessment of scour downstream of Marcinelle weir, Belgium C. Swartenbroekx, D. Bousmar, C. Haumont, and T. Racot (423)

5:30 pm Mississippi riverbank harbor siltation study R. Fernández, M.H. García, and G. Parker (428)

5:45 pm Migration of banks along the Kapuas River, West Kalimantan B. Vermeulen, A.K. Huisman, A.J.F. Hoitink, and M. Pramulya (432)

6 pm Scour morphology at rock-bed sills for different spatial arrangements and geometric configurations S. Pagliara and M. Palermo (441)

6:15 pm Experimental investigation of the location of a submerged groyne for bank protection B.A. Zaid and K. Koll (445)

Tu, 7/12: Parallel Session Tu, 7/12: Welcome Reception

7 pm – WELCOME RECEPTION Center for Global Citizenship Atrium

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Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am FLOOD SCIENCE FOR FLOOD PREDICTION, MITIGATION, AND RESILIENCE 1—Room 352/353 Chaired by M. Muste, L. Weber, and N. Young

9:15 am INVITED TALK: Floods in the United States and monitoring challenges R. Holmes

9:45 am Toward an adaptive, flood risk management strategy in The Netherlands: An overview of recent history C. Zevenbergen, J. Rijke, S. van Herk, L. Chelleri, and P.J.T.M. Bloemen (679)

10 am Spatially defining flood risk M. Babister, D. McLuckie, M. Tetallick, E. Askew, and A. Toniato (677)

10:15 am On the Flood-IMPAT procedure for flood risk analysis and mapping F. Ballio, D. Molinari, G. Minucci, M.T. Mendoza, F. Atun, S. Menoni, and T. Simonelli (667)

10:30 am Analysis of post-event damage data for supporting risk-modeling process G. Minnucci, M.T. Mendoza, F. Atun, S. Menoni, F. Ballio, D. Molinari, and T. Simonelli (669)

10:45 am The role of research and science in WMO flood management activities G. Teruggi, I. Riboldi, P. Pilon, and M. Muste (659)

Wed, 7/13: Plenary Lecture

8:15–9:05 am INVITED PLENARY LECTURE—Saint Louis Room Exploiting turbulence metrics and secondary flows in straight river reaches and open channels Prof. Edwin Cowen, Cornell University (7)

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Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am LABORATORY AND EDDY-RESOLVING NUMERICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF FUNDAMENTAL PHYSICAL PROCESSES AND TRANSPORT IN OPEN CHANNELS 1—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by S. Creelle and M. Koken

9:15 am On the spatial development of the mixing layer at the interface between open water and a region containing emerged vegetation M. Koken and G. Constantinescu (34)

9:30 am Large eddy simulations of rough bed open channel flow with low submergence and free surface tracking R. McSherry, K. Chua, T. Stoesser, and R.A. Falconer (36)

9:45 am Large-eddy simulations of flow and turbulence in an asymmetric compound channel K.V. Chua, B. Fraga, T. Stoesser, S.H. Hong, & T.W. Sturm (38)

10 am Physical and numerical modeling of hyporheic flow through a gravel bar A.M. Ferreira da Silva, K.G. Mumford, S.H. Seyed Mirzaei, C. Fruetel, and A. Rey (472)

10:15 am Large eddy simulation (LES) of flow and bedload transport at an idealized 90-degree diversion: Insight into Bulle-Effect S. Dutta, P. Fischer, and M.H. Garcia (42)

10:30 am LES simulation of flow and bed shear stress in a river reach taking into account of vegetation, bushes, cobble bars, and large boulders A. Nakayama and K. Asami (45)

10:45 am LES-DEM coupled simulation of sediment particles saltating process in turbulent open channels D. Liu, X. Liu, and X. Fun (47)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am NUMERICAL ASPECTS OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND HYPER-CONCENTRATED/GRANULAR FLOWS Room 251ab Chaired by X. Liu and A. Paquier

9:15 am Modeling bed-material sediment transport on a river network J.A. Czuba, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, K.B. Gran, P. Belmont, and P.R. Wilcock (453)

9:30 am Modeling sediment pulses on an armored channel C. Juez, E. Battisacco, A.J. Schleiss and M.J. Franca (455)

9:45 am Reduction of a high-resolution numerical flow and sediment transport model Q. Zhang, T. Speckter, R. Hinkelmann, G. Hillebrand, and H. Moser (457)

10 am A 3-D flow calculation around a structure in gravel bed rivers by using non-hydrostatic depth-integrated model with dynamic rough-wall law T. Uchida, S. Fukuoka, and A.N. Papanicolaou (463)

10:15 am Computational modeling of bed morphodynamics in curved channels M. Nabi, S. Giri, I. Kimura, and Y. Shimizu (465)

10:30 am Modeling large scale and long term morphological response to engineering interventions at river bifurcation M.F.M. Yossef, A. Becker, and G. Deák (467)

10:45 am Jet erosion test apparatus: A 3-D computational modeling appraisal X. Liu, M.W. Farthing, and M. Talepour (470)

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Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am RIVER TRAINING AND RIVER RESTORATION Room 253ad Chaired by W.S.J. Uijttewaal and W. Hager

9:15 am Experimental study on the effects of longitudinal training walls T.B. Le, A. Crosato, and W.S.J. Uijttewaal (707)

9:30 am Restoring natural river processes through channel realignment N.J. Holste (709)

9:45 am ID+ model for overbank flows with a transition bed friction-emergent rigid vegetation drag S. Proust, J.B. Faure, V. Dupuis, C. Berni, and A. Paquier (767)

10 am The engineering in beaver dams G. Müller and J. Watling (713)

10:15 am Energy loss from different channel restoration structures A.J. Odgaard, K.M. Snyder, and B.K. Barquist (716)

10:30 am Dynamic reconfiguration of riparian trees in towing tank experiments J. Järvelä, J. Aberle, and J. Jalonen (742)

10:45 am Effects of riparian vegetation development in a restored lowland stream A. Vargas-Luna, A. Crosato, A.J.F. Hoitink, J. Groot, and W.S.J. Uijttewaal (746)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

11:10–12:55 pm FLOOD SCIENCE FOR FLOOD PREDICTION, MITIGATION, AND RESILIENCE 2—Room 352/353 Chaired by M. Muste, L. Weber, and N. Young

11:10 am INVITED TALK: Historic floods in the Americas Parana River—M.H. Garcia Meramec River—D. Hanes

11:40 am Improving Flood Hazard Prediction Models G.M. Smart (665)

11:55 am A critical assessment of the performance of standard 2-D flood models based on results of 3-D URANS simulations D.V. Horna Munoz and S.G. Constantinescu (649)

12:10 pm Using 2-D hydraulic models for planning and designing more resilient infrastructure A. McCoy, M. Schubert, and B. Stafne (653)

12:25 pm Flood modelling using sub-grid based Finite Volume approach and Constrained interpolation Profile method M.A. Ali, I. Kimura, and Y. Shimizu (651)

12:40 pm Evaluation of the flow released from a levee breach through a Bayesian inverse methodology M. D’Oria, P. Mignosa, and M.G. Tanda (671)

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Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

11:10–12:55 pm LABORATORY AND EDDY-RESOLVING NUMERICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF FUNDAMENTAL PHYSICAL PROCESSES AND TRANSPORT IN OPEN CHANNELS 2—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by V. Chu and D. Djordjevic

11:10 am Evaluation of turbulence closure models for the simulation of circular impinging jets S.M. Ghaneeizad, M. Karamigolbaghi, J.F. Atkinson, and S.J. Bennett (49)

11:25 am Shallow mixing layer simulation by Lagrangian advection of blocks V.H. Chu and W. Altai (51)

11:40 am Characterization of vortex interaction with Lagrangian coherent structures A.M. Ricardo, R.B. Canelas, and R.M.L. Ferreira (53)

11:55 am Fluid structures in a shallow wake flow in an open channel G. Nasif, R. Balachandar, and R.M. Barron (55)

12:10 pm Time-averaged vortex structure around an immobile boulder A.G. Tsakiris, T. Papanicolaou, S.M. Hajimirzaie, and J.H. Buchholz (57)

12:25 pm Application of artificial neural networks for river regime M.D. Bui, D. Huber, K. Kaveh, A.M.F. da Silva, and P. Rutschmann (59)

12:40 pm Prediction of mixing layer in symmetric and asymmetric compound channels K. Devi, K.K. Khatua, and J.R. Khuntia (21)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

11:10–12:55 pm IMAGE-BASED MEASUREMENTS AND VIDEO ANALYSIS 1—Room 251ab Chaired by Y. Ozeren and B. Camenen

11:10 am Estimation of the volume of a fine sediment deposit over a gravel bar during a flushing event B. Camenen, A. Herrero, E. Perret, C. Berni, F. Thollet, A. Buffet, G. Dramais, C. Le Bescond, and M. Lagouy (190)

11:25 am Monitoring river flood using fixed image-based stations: Experience feedback from three rivers in France A. Hauet (192)

11:40 am Settling velocity of a porous sphere A. Emadzadeh and Y.M. Chiew (196)

11:55 am Unmanned aerial vehicle-based surface PIV experiments at Surb Creek M. Detert, F. Huber, and V. Weitbrecht (198)

12:10 pm Image analysis for quantifying the spatiotemporal evolution of rill networks in laboratory experiments H.G. Momm, R.R. Wells, S.J. Bennett, and A.L. Gilley (200)

12:25 pm RIVeR—Toward affordable, practical, and user-friendly toolbox for large scale PIV and PTV techniques A. Patalano and C.M. García (202)

12:40 pm Measurement of the free-surface elevation in a steady flow in complex topography using photogrammetry F. Franzini, S. Soares-Frazão, and H. Capart (204)

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Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

11:10–12:40 pm ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF RIVER FLOWS Room 253ad Chaired by B. Greimann and Z. Cheng

11:10 am Calibration and model performance decay in prediction of the effect of human intervention in river systems K.D. Berends, J.J. Warmink, and S.J.M.H. Hulscher (721)

11:25 am Numerical modeling on benthic macroinvertebrate dynamics in rivers considering functional feeding groups and bed-residence groups Y. Mizoguchi and Y. Toda (723)

11:40 am Searching Pareto-efficient dynamic environmental flows by means of nondominated sorting genetic algorithms II A. Niayifar and P. Perona (730)

11:55 pm Modeling riparian vegetation on Sacramento River with SRH-1DV B.P. Greimann (734)

12:10 pm Possible causes for vegetation recruitment on riverine bars and an experiment on the effect of nutrients inflows on rapid growth of vegetation in Korea H. Woo, J.G. Kang, H.J. Cho, Y.S. Choi, and M.H. Park (736)

12:25 pm Vegetation changes at “Fundu Mare Island” in the Inner Danube Delta near Brăila (Romania) P. Zinke, J. Aberle, and F. Nedelcuţ (740)

Wed, 7/13: Lunch, Plenary Lecture, Coffee Break

12:55–2:10 pm LUNCH BREAK—Wool Ballroom 170-171

2:10–3 pm INVITED PLENARY LECTURE—Saint Louis Room Science to inform resilient management of rivers in a changing world Prof. Peter Goodwin, University of Idaho (10)

3–3:40 pm COFFEE BREAK—Wool Ballroom 170-171

3:40–5:40 pm PARALLEL SESSIONS

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3:40–5:40 pm FLOOD SCIENCE FOR FLOOD PREDICTION, MITIGATION, AND RESILIENCE 3—Room 352/353 Chaired by M. Muste, L. Weber, and N. Young

3:40 pm INVITED TALK: Iowa flood forecasting and information system W. Krajewski

4:10 pm New Technology in debris-flow modeling: a WebGIS integrated solution for TRENT2D N. Zorzi, G. Rosatti, D. Zugliani, A. Rizzi, and S. Piffer (661)

4:25 pm Understanding true basin performance I. Testoni, M. Babister, M. Retallick, and M. Loveridge (675)

4:40 pm From flood levels to emergency response M. Retallick, M. Babister, I. Testoni, and M. Loveridge (673)

4:55 pm Statistical modeling approach for integrating probabilistic climate projections with the river flow data S. Patidar, K. Hassan, H. Haynes, and G. Pender (655)

5:10 pm Urban flood issues in China X. Cheng

5:25 pm Field measurement and numerical analysis on tree breakage modes during floods in a middle-stream reach K. Michioku, K. Kanda, S. Kometani, and Y. Irie (639)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

3:40–5:25 pm RESERVOIR SUSTAINABILITY—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by A. Cox and J. Schneider

3:40 pm Continuous monitoring of suspended sediment for reservoir management K.E. Juracek, C.J. Lee, and C.B. Gnau (487)

3:55 pm Venting of turbidity currents as a measure to avoid sediment depositions in high head reservoirs J. Schneider, H. Badura, and G. Zenz (491)

4:10 pm Experimental investigation on turbidity current venting under restrained outflow discharges S. Chamoun, G. De Cesare, and A.J. Schleiss (497)

4:25 pm Reservoir sustainability planning and management in the context of western U.S. reservoirs S. Kimbrel, K.L. Collins, and T.J. Randle (499)

4:40 pm Monitoring, measuring, and modeling a reservoir flush on the Niobrara River in the Nebraska Sandhills S. Gibson and P. Boyd (501)

4:55 pm An assessment of the downstream impacts on a riparian corridor of employing Flow Assisted Sediment Transport (FAST) to remove sediment from a major southern California reservoir F. Weirich (503)

5:10 pm Reservoir sedimentation issue in Pillur reservoir in Nilgiris basin (India): Field reconnaissance and numerical modeling using Delft3D S. Giri, M. Yossef, S. Raman, P. Cleyet-Merle, and B.R.K. Pillai (505)

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3:40–5:40 pm IMAGE-BASED MEASUREMENTS AND VIDEO ANALYSIS 2—Room 251ab Chaired by Y. Ozeren and M. Noack

3:40 pm Analysis of the influence of restoration measures on the morphodynamics of sand-dominated lowland streams V. Berger, A. Niemann, and C.K. Feld (206)

3:55 pm Application of imaging techniques in dam-break flow experiments with crushed walnut shells L. Rébillout, Y. Ozeren, and M. Altinakar (212)

4:10 pm 3-D observation of the behavior of benthic copepods in a transparent gravel bed D. Sidler, F.G. Michalec, and M. Holzner (214)

4:25 pm Monitoring of sandbars migration process in mega-sized braided river using MODIS R.K. Biswas, A. Yorozuya, and S. Egashira (216)

4:40 pm Testing “structure-from-motion” photogrammetry for high-resolution topographic surveys in hydraulic laboratories M. Noack, G. Schmid, M. Thom, and S. Wieprecht (218)

4:55 pm Noncontact methods for measuring water-surface elevations and velocities in rivers: Implications for depth and discharge extraction J.M. Nelson, P.J. Kinzel, R.R. McDonald, & M.W. Schmeeckle (220)

5:10 pm Development of a portable surface image velocimeter by using a far infra-red camera K. Yu and B. Yoon (222)

5:25 pm Assessing UAV use to quantify flow processes in rivers G. Blois, J.L. Best, K.T. Christensen, V. Cichella, A. Donahue, N. Hovakimyan, A. Kennedy, & I. Pakrasi (210)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

3:40–5:40 pm HYDRODYNAMICS AND MORPHODYNAMICS OF RIVER CONFLUENCES—Room 253ad Chaired by B. Rhoads and Q.W. Lewis

3:40 pm Three-dimensional numerical modeling of mixing at the junction of the Calumet-Sag Channel and the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal: A comparison between density- driven and advection-driven mixing D. Wang, S. Dutta, M.H. Garcia, & P. Ryan Jackson (547)

3:55 pm Effect of level of inflow turbulence on the spatial development of a shallow mixing layer in an open channel Z. Cheng and G. Constantinescu (550)

4:10 pm On the combined effect of bed elevation discordances in the main-river and the tributary in 90° straight- channel confluences D. Đorđević and I. Stojnić (556)

4:25 pm Relations among mean flow, turbulence, and mixing at a small stream confluence B.L. Rhoads and Q.W. Lewis (561)

4:40 pm Flow evolution near the apex of two small stream confluences using large-scale particle image velocimetry Q.W. Lewis and B.L. Rhoads (563)

4:55 pm Dynamic mode decomposition applied to the shear layer flows in an open channel confluence L. Schindfessel, S. Creëlle, and T. De Mulder (572)

5:10 pm Field measurements of flow hydrodynamics at a discordant confluence of a gravel-bed river T.A. Sukhodolova, A.N. Sukhodolov, and J. Krick (578)

5:25 pm Field experiments on flow hydrodynamics at river confluences A.N. Sukhodolov and T.A. Sukhodolova (580)

Wed, 7/13: Parallel Session

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Wed, 7/13: Meetings

6 pm IAHR Fluvial Hydraulics Committee Meeting Room 251ab

6 pm IAHR Young Professionals Meeting Room 253ad Reception for YPN participants will follow formal meeting (also Room 253 ab cd)

6 pm IAHR Flood Risk Management Technical Committee Meeting Room 352/353

6 pm River Experiment Centre of the kict [Andong, South Korea] Meeting (Wool Ballroom 173)

Th, 7/14: Plenary Lecture

8:15–9:05 am INVITED PLENARY LECTURE—Saint Louis Room Erosion processes of river dikes Prof. Willi Hager, ETH Zurich (12)

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9:15–11 am LARGE WOOD IN FLUVIAL ECOSYSTEMS Room 352/353 Chaired by V. Ruiz-Villanueva and F. Blade

9:15 am Large wood research in Swiss watercourses V. Ruiz-Villanueva, A. Badoux, R.M. Boes, D. Rickenmann, C. Rickli, I. Schalko, L. Schmocker, M. Schwarz, N. Steeb, M. Stoffel, and V. Weitbrecht (785)

9:30 am Localized geomorphic effects attributable to the presence of in-channel wood along two Italian gravel- bed rivers: Preliminary results L. Picco, D. Oss Cazzador, and R. Rainato (787)

9:45 am Size reduction of large wood in steep mountain streams N. Steeb, D. Rickenmann, C. Rickli, A. Badoux, P. Waldner, and F. Stetter (789)

10 am Modeling the effect of organic fine material in a driftwood accumulation on backwater rise I. Schalko, L. Schmocker, V. Weitbrecht, and R.M. Boes (791)

10:15 am Strategies in the 2-D numerical modeling of wood transport in rivers E. Bladé, M. Sánchez-Juny, and V. Ruiz-Villanueva (793)

10:30 am Wood accumulation at bridges: Laboratory experiments on the effects of pier shape P.N. De Cicco, E. Paris, and L. Solari (795)

10:45 am 3-D computational modeling of stream flow resistance due to large woody debris Y. Xu and X. Liu (797)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am FIELD STUDIES AND NUMERICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF FLOW AND TRANSPORT IN NATURAL STREAMS Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by Y. Lai and L. Schindfessel

9:15 am Appropriate limits on discretionary diversion to the Chicago waterways C.S. Melching (77)

9:30 am The effect of flow depth on the characteristics of in situ secondary currents in a gravel-bed river P. Nicol and R.W.J. Lacey (79)

9:45 am Characteristics of side channels in the River Ain, France R.P. van Denderen, R.M.J. Schielen, A. Blom, M.G. Kleinhans, and S.J.M.H. Hulscher (83)

10 am Numerical modeling of submerged flow over ogee-weirs Ø. Pedersen and N. Rüther (92)

10:15 am A new 3-D hydrostatic-assumption model for river and reservoir modeling Y.G. Lai and K. Wu (94)

10:30 am Turbulent flow over a porous pool-riffle sequence Y. Liu, H. Dun, H. Fang, and T. Stoesser (96)

10:45 am Uniform flow in prismatic compound channel: Benchmarking numerical models D. Bousmar, B. Mathurin, J.N.S. Fernandes, M. Filonovich, C. Hazlewood, F. Huthoff, J.B. Leal, A. Paquier, and S. Proust (99)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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9:15–11 am MECHANICS OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT 1 Room 251AB Chaired by R.M.L Ferreira and S. Fukuoka

9:15 am Image analysis of grain size distribution around area of sand deposition A. Kadota, C. Asayama, and I. Dale Ndwambi (317)

9:30 am Experimental study on sediment particles at entrainment and deposition F. Antico, P. Sanches, I. Fent, R. Aleixo, and R.M.L. Ferreira (322)

9:45 am The incipient motion of sediment in a channel with model emergent vegetation J.Q. Yang, H. Chung, and H.M. Nepf (326)

10 am Experimental study of a coarse-gravel river bed: Elucidating the near-wall and pore-space turbulent flow physics T. Kim, G. Blois, J. Best, and K.T. Christensen (333)

10:15 am Laser scanning method to characterize bed arrangement and its influence on incipient motion of gravel sediments E. Perret, C. Berni, A. Herrero, B. Camenen, A. Buffet, and K. El kadi Abderrezzak (336)

10:30 am Exploring the influence of a mobile bed surface upon infiltration A. Dudill, P. Frey, M. Church, and H. Lafaye de Micheaux (338)

10:45 am Prediction of sand transport over immobile gravel from supply limited to capacity conditions R.A. Kuhnle, E.J. Langendoen, and D.G. Wren (340)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

9:15–11 am FLOW IN VEGETATED CHANNELS Room 253ad Chaired by A. Sukhodolov and T. Tokyay

9:15 am Effect of the solid volume fraction on the flow past a circular patch of vegetation with a low submergence depth W.Y. Chang, G. Constantinescu, and W.F. Tsai (755)

9:30 am Drag coefficient distribution in LES of vegetated open channel flows S. Yokojima and Y. Kawahara (763)

9:45 am Influence of semi-circle patches of vegetation on flow and local scouring N. Marofi Fathpour and A. Armanini (765)

10 am Determination of bed roughness parameters from field survey: Application to the Cavaillon River, Haïti O. Carlier d’Odeigne and S. Soares-Frazão (769)

10:15 am Cross-sectional flow in a meandering laboratory channel with vegetated bed (771) D. Termini

10:30 am Experimental investigation of the effects of vegetation on morphodynamics and sediment sorting C.-L. Jang, E. Penning, J. Kang, U. Ji, Y. Ryu, and H. Yeo (778)

10:45 am Comparison of turbulent features through upstream, interior, and downstream of sparsely vegetated open channel turbulent flow S. Maji, D. Pal, M. Mahananda, and P. Reddy Hanmaiahgari (780)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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11:10–12:55 pm ESTIMATION OF UNCERTAINTY IN HYDROMETRIC MEASUREMENTS AND OTHER FLOW MEASUREMENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCALE 1 Room 352/353 Chaired by J Gonzales and D. Kim

11:10 am Consistent and efficient processing of ADCP streamflow measurements D.S. Mueller (227)

11:25 am Comparison of ISO and other methods for computing uncertainty of current-meter measurements A.J. Clemmens and B.T. Wahlin (259)

11:40 am Estimation of Type A uncertainty of moving-boat ADCP streamflow measurements H. Huang (240)

11:55 am Experimental study on uncertainty analysis for ADCP discharge measurements in a real-scale river experimental facility D. Kim and J. Kim (253)

12:10 pm Field inter-laboratory experiments versus propagation methods for quantifying uncertainty in discharge measurements using the velocity-area method A. Despax, A.-C. Favre, A. Belleville, A. Hauet, J. Le Coz, G. Dramais, and B. Blanquart (231)

12:25 pm RiverFlowUA—A package to estimate total uncertainty in ADCP discharge measurements by FOTSE—with an application in hydrometry J.A. González-Castro, J. Buzard, and A. Mohamed (246)

12:40 pm Viscous shear layers in partially vegetated channels A.C. Lima and N. Izumi (773)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

11:10–12:55 pm FLOOD PROPAGATION AND CONTROL AND DAM-BREAK FLOWS—Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by N.W. Thomas and J. Curran

11:10 am Quantifying the impact of distributed flood detention structures under variable rainfall, antecedent soil, and structural storage conditions N.W. Thomas, L.J. Weber, and A. Arenas Amado (635)

11:25 am Urgent and strategic dredging as sediment management measures to reduce flood risk in the Kura River Azerbaijan T. Vijverberg, G.J. Akkerman, C.J. Sloff, M. van der Ruyt, E. Sultanov, and S. Abbasov (637)

11:40 am Flood-flow characteristics in a blocked river: Detour flow around a bridge T. Okamoto, H. Takebayashi, T. Kaneko, Y. Shibayama, and K. Toda (642)

11:55 am Effect of floods on the morphology and stability of channels with emergent vegetation J.C. Curran and K.A. Waters (645)

12:10 pm Empirical model of embankment dam breaching D.C. Froehlich (625)

12:25 pm Sensitivity of the breaching process in the case of overtopping induced fluvial dike failure I. Rifai, S. Erpicum, P. Archambeau, D. Violeau, M. Pirotton, B. Dewals, and K. El kadi Abderrezzak (627)

12:40 pm Apparent shear in an asymmetric compound channel K. Devi, K.K. Khatua, and B.S. Das (24)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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11:10–12:55 pm MECHANICS OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT 2 Room 251ab Chaired by P. Diplas and A.J. Odgaard

11:10 am Streambed structure, stream power, and bed load transport: A unified outlook for gravel-bed and bedrock streams P. Diplas, P. Chatanantavet, and J. Almedeij (346)

11:25 am Fine sediment storage in pools in gravel-bed Russian River, Calif. A.B. Shvidchenko, R. MacArthur, and D. Ripple (351)

11:40 am Application of acoustic Doppler technology in sediment transport D. Wagenaar and I. Jones (357)

11:55 am Development of a portable passive-acoustic bedload monitoring system B.T. Goodwiller, J.P. Chambers, D.G. Wren, J.R. Rigby, Jr., R.C. Hilldale, and W.O. Carpenter Jr. (359)

12:10 pm Turbulence measurements over immobile gravel with additions of sand from supply limited to capacity transport conditions D.G. Wren, R.A. Kuhnle, E.J. Langendoen, & M.E. Ursic (361)

12:25 pm Form- and grain-roughness components of Shields- parameter similitude for an HSR model M.T. Mustafa, A.L. Cox, R.D. Davinroy, B.J. Krischel, and I.H. Nguyen (367)

12:40 pm Field and laboratory calibration of impact plates to measure coarse bedload W.O. Carpenter Jr., D.G. Wren, R.A. Kuhnle, J.R. Rigby, Jr., R.C. Hilldale, B.T. Goodwiller, and J.P. Chambers (371)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

11:10–12:55 pm INNOVATIVE FIELD AND LABORATORY INSTRUMENTATION FOR THE STUDY OF FLOW IN OPEN CHANNELS —Room 253ad Chaired by A. Dittrich and R. Jackson

11:10 am Bed texture mapping in large rivers using recreational- grade sidescan sonar D. Hamill, J.M. Wheaton, D. Buscombe, P.E. Grams, and T.S. Melis (112)

11:25 am Boat-generated wave measurements in the Connecticut River Y. Ozeren, M. Altinakar, and A. Simon (114)

11:40 am 3-D–PTV in a shallow embayment Y. Akutina, S. Gaskin, and L. Mydlarski (116)

11:55 am Characteristics of instantaneous turbulent events in southern German Bight S.M. Amirshahi, C. Winter, and E. Kwoll (69)

12:10 pm Relation between bankfull geometry of alluvial rivers and flow duration curve K. Naito and G. Parker (71)

12:25 pm Seiche-induced unsteady flows in the Huron-Erie Corridor: Spectral analysis of oscillations in stage and discharge in the St. Clair and Detroit Rivers P.R. Jackson (88)

12:40 pm Experimental results on the physical model of an USBR type II stilling basin O. Fecarotta, A. Carravetta, G. Del Giudice, R. Padulano, A. Brasca, and M. Pontillo (90)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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12:55 pm LUNCH—Wool Ballroom 170-171

2:10 pm INVITED PLENARY LECTURE—Saint Louis Room Dam safety in the USA and numerical dam-break modeling for decision support in critical infrastructure protection Prof. Mustafa Altinakar, University of Mississippi (5)

3–3:40 pm COFFEE BREAK—Wool Ballroom 170-171

3:40–5:10 pm PARALLEL SESSIONS

Th, 7/14: Lunch, Plenary Lecture, Coffee Break

3:40–5:10 pm ESTIMATION OF UNCERTAINTY IN HYDROMETRIC MEASUREMENTS AND OTHER FLOW MEASUREMENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCALE 2 Room 352/353 Chaired by J. Gonzales and R. Holmes

3:40 pm River rating complexity R.R. Holmes Jr. (234)

3:55 pm Rating curve uncertainty: An illustration of two estimation methods R.R. Mason Jr., J.E. Kiang, and T.A. Cohn (251)

4:10 pm A survey of the uncertainty in stage-discharge rating curves and streamflow records in the United States J.E. Kiang, R.R. Mason Jr., and T.A. Cohn (249)

4:25 pm Bayesian analysis of rating curves at twin gauge stations J. Le Coz, V. Mansanarez, B. Renard, M. Lang, G. Pierrefeu, K. Pobanz, and R. Le Boursicaud (229)

4:40 pm Impacts of unsteady flows on methods for monitoring stream flows M. Muste, Z. Cheng, A.R. Firoozfar, H-W. Tsai, T. Loeser, and H. Xu (257)

4:55 pm An unbiased lumped-type flow rating algorithm for full gated culverts S.M. Hajimirzaie and J.A. González-Castro (242)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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3:40–5:10 pm DYNAMICS OF MEANDER CUTOFFS Wool Ballroom 173 Chaired by K. Konsoer and A. Viviano

3:40 pm Migration and cutoff formation of meanders in a hyper- arid environment: A case study from the Tarim River, western China Z.W. Li, G.A. Yu, and Z.Y. Wang (587)

3:55 pm Analysis of catastrophic channel change in a high-energy gravel bed stream M.J. Ivezich, D. Blackham, and R.E. Hardie (589)

4:10 pm Planform evolution of neck cutoffs on elongate meander loops, White River, Arkansas, USA K.M. Konsoer, D. Richards, and B. Edwards (591)

4:25 pm Bed morphology and sedimentology at chute cutoffs: A case study of Mackey Bend, lower Wabash River, IL-IN J.Z. LeRoy, B.L. Rhoads, and J.L. Best (594)

4:40 pm An entropy-based classification scheme of meandering rivers R.R. Gutierrez and J.D. Abad (596)

4:55 pm Cutoff processes and their importance for bed and planform morphodynamic adaptation Z. Li, A. Mendoza, J.D. Abad, T. Endreny, C.D. Smallidge, and B. Han (598)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

3:40–5:10 pm FISH PASSAGE Room 251 ab Chaired by M. Politano and R. Szupiany

3:40 pm Numerical hydraulic analysis of a pool type fish passage V. Kiricci and A.O. Celik (805)

3:55 pm Possible applications of population models for the development of river continuity-concepts using the example of the Ruhr catchment, Germany D. Teschlade and A. Niemann (807)

4:10 pm Scale modeling of a fish pass: Preliminary tests with living salmonid fishes D. Bousmar, J.C. Pype, and X. Rollin (809)

4:25 pm Movement analysis of fish near a low head dam on the Mississippi River D.L. Smith, J.M. Nestler, T. Threadgill, and R.A. Goodwin (811)

4:40 pm A two-phase flow model to evaluate the effect of fish passage structures on the hydrodynamics and TDG downstream of McNary Dam M. Politano and R. Laughery (812)

4:55 pm Prediction of energy loss in compound channels having enlarging floodplains B.S. Das, K.K Khatua, and K. Devi (29)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

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3:40–4:55 pm NUMERICAL PREDICTION OF FLOODS AND CHANNEL-FLOODPLAIN INTERACTIONS Room 253ad Chaired by K. Strom and D. Horna Munoz

3:40 pm Quasi-three–dimensional numerical and scale-model studies on flood propagation and water storage in a dam reservoir Y. Tsukamoto and S. Fukuoka (603)

3:55 pm 3-D numerical simulation of cross-levee breaching process due to overtopping flow S. Onda, T. Hosoda, N. Jacimovic, and I. Kimura (605)

4:10 pm A 1-D / 2-D coupled model for the floods in the Niger inner delta A. Paquier and G. Belaud (607)

4:25 pm FEM–Floodplain Evaluation Matrix as tool to assess the role of floodplains for reducing flood risk H. Habersack, B. Schober, and D. Haspel (619)

4:40 pm Near-bed turbulence characteristics in unsteady hydrograph flows over mobile and immobile gravel beds J. Kean, A. Cuthbertson, and L. Beevers (621)

Th, 7/14: Parallel Session

5:30 – 6 pm CLOSING CEREMONY—Saint Louis Room Chaired by G. Constantinescu, M. Garcia, and D. Hanes

7 pm – CONFERENCE BANQUET The Chase Park Plaza (transportation provided from the Busch Center)

Th, 7/14: Closing Ceremony, Conference Banquet

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Please note that to participate in the Technical Tour, you will need a tour voucher ticket. If you were confirmed for the Technical Tour, you will get the tour voucher ticket with your registration materials.

Tour buses will depart from the Busch Student Center at 8 am on Friday.

Arrival back in downtown St. Louis and the Busch Student Center is expected at about 5 pm. A lunch snack and coffee will be provided during the Technical Tour.

Buses will take participants to Alton (arrival 9 am) from which they will visit either the Mel Price Locks and Dam or the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center (NGRREC). Following the tour, guests will board the Motor Vessel Pathfinder, which will take them to St. Louis. While on board, guests will hear presentations on a variety of subjects about the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. Sack lunches will be provided aboard the Pathfinder.

Places of interest along the river:

• Confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers

• Chain of Rocks Canal

• The third busiest inland port in the United States, the Port of St. Louis and America’s Central Port

• Locks 27 (guests will stay on vessel to lock through)

• St. Louis Harbor Chevrons

• A side trip up the Old Mississippi Channel, including Mosenthein Island, Chouteau Island, and the Chain of Rocks Low Water Dam (if time permits)

• The vessel will pass under many notable bridges, including the new Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge and the historic Eads Bridge

• The Gateway Arch and the St. Louis Riverfront

Fri, 7/15: Technical Tour Notes

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Downtown St. Louis—Shuttle Stops

Pear Street Inn2211 Market St.

Hyatt Regency

311 4th St.

Marriott St. Louis800 Washington Ave.

Shuttles to the Busch Student Center on the St. Louis University Campus will be provided on Tuesday, July 12, Wednesday, July 13, and Thursday, July 14th. All conference participants can get a shuttle to the conference at the following locations.

Pear Tree Inn / 2211 Market St

Hyatt / 311 S 4th St

Marriott St. Louis / 800 Washington Ave

Times are approximate, but we will make every attempt to adhere to them.

Shuttle 1 Morning Schedule

Pear Tree Inn 6:30 am

Hyatt 6:40 am

Marriott St. Louis 6:50 am

Busch Student Center 7:05 am

Pear Tree Inn 7:20 am

Hyatt 7:30 am

Marriott St. Louis 7:40 am

Busch Student Center 7:55 am

Pear Tree Inn 8:10 am

Hyatt 8:20 am

Marriott St. Louis 8:30 am

Busch Student Center 8:45 am

Shuttle 2 Morning Schedule

Hyatt 6:30 am

Marriott St. Louis 6:40 am

Busch Student Center 6:55 am

Pear Tree Inn 7:10 am

Hyatt 7:20 am

Marriott St. Louis 7:30 am

Busch Student Center 7:45 am

Pear Tree Inn 8:00 am

Hyatt 8:10 am

Marriott St. Louis 8:20 am

Busch Student Center 8:35 am

Shuttle Schedule

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St. Louis University Buildings

Busch Student Center

MarchettiTowerWest

RitterHall

DuBourgHall

Center forGlobalCitizenship

Shuttles from the Busch Student Center to the same three locations will be provided on the afternoons of Tuesday, July 12 and Wednesday, July 13th.

• The afternoon schedule will be more irregular in order to better accommodate participant demand. Shuttle service will begin at 6:00 pm and continue through 8:00 pm.

• On Thursday, shuttles will be available to take participants from the Busch Student Center to the Chase Park Plaza Hotel for the conference banquet beginning at 6:30 pm.

• There will also be shuttle service available after the banquet, providing service to the three stops already listed.

Shuttle Schedule

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Busch Student Center First Floor Busch Student Center Second Floor

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Busch Student Center Third Floor Notes

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River Flow 2016International Conference

on Fluvial Hydraulics

July 12– 15, 2016 — St. Louis, USA

Co-organized by:

IIHR — Hydroscience & Engineering University of Iowa

Ven Te Chow Hydrosystems Laboratory University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Saint Louis University

in collaboration with the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center

(NGRREC) at Alton, Illinois

NGRREC

Hydroscience & Engineering