Towards an Integrated Observational System to Investigate Sediment Transport in the Tidal Inlets of the Lagoon of Venice
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
An observation system integrating satellite images, in situ water parameters and hydrodynamic measurements was implemented in a tidal inlet of the Venice Lagoon (Northern Adriatic Sea,
Italy). The experimental infrastructure was developed to autonomously investigate suspended sediment dynamics in the two channels of the Lido inlet in relation to the longshore currents in the littoral
zone and the tidal circulation along the lagoon channel network. It provided time series of turbidity at
the surface, water flow and acoustic backscatter, which was converted into turbidity along the vertical
column during different tidal phases and meteo-marine conditions. Accurate turbidity maps were
derived from Sentinel-2 (Copernicus) and Landsat 8 (NASA) satellites. Long-term in situ data from
field surveys enabled the calibration and intercalibration of the instrumental setup and validation
of satellite-derived products. Time series from the instrumental network were analyzed in order to
evaluate the temporal variability of suspended sediment in relation to tidal phases and the different
meteo-marine conditions. The integration of available datasets with satellite images also permitted
the testing of the methodology for a 3-D reconstruction of the suspended sediment pattern in calm
sea conditions, under the effect of the sole hydrodynamical forcing. Remotely sensed data provide a
synoptic distribution of turbidity in the inlet area allowing the analysis of the surficial patterns of
suspended sediment and the inferring of information on the transport processes at different spatial
scales. In calm sea conditions, the results show that the transport is driven by tidal currents with a
net seaward transport related to a larger export of materials from the northern basin of the Lagoon of
Venice. During typical northeasterly storms, materials mobilized on the beaches and in the shoreface
are transported into the inlet and distributed into the lagoon channel network, following the flood
tidal currents and determining net import of materials. The multitude of information provided by
this system can support research on aquatic science (i.e., numerical simulations) and address end-user
community practices. The ecosystem management will also benefit operational purposes, such as the
monitoring of morphological transformations, erosion processes and planning of coastal defense in
the future scenarios of sea level rise. The developed approach will also help to understand how the
regulation of the inlet flow introduced by the operation of the flood barriers will affect the fluxes of
particles and, in the long term, the lagoon morphodynamics.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
remote sensing; sedim
Elenco autori:
Scarpa, GIAN MARCO; Zaggia, Luca; Braga, Federica; Manfe', Giorgia; Lorenzetti, Giuliano
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