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ADCPs Assist International Team to Measure the Mightiest River:
Measuring the Amazin' Amazon
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| Scientists on the Amazon found ADCPs™ to be far superior equipment, method and logistics for producing more accurate measurements of river discharge. |
ADCPs have sparked a
revolution in measuring river dischargethe volume of water flowing in a river. The ADCP method replaces a labor-intensive,
time-consuming, life-risking approach that has remained largely unchanged for a hundred
years. Nowhere are the advantages of the ADCP method and logistics more dramatic
than the Amazon River in Brazil.
Since 1994, an international team under the aegis of Dr.
Jean-Loup Guyot of France's Institut de Recherche has been using the ADCP to study
river discharge throughout the Amazon basin. The team is comprised of Brazilian (ANEEL,
formerly DNAEE) and French (IRD, formerly ORSTOM) workers. They have taken more than 500
sections, not only at traditional sections but at new and interesting sites. Through this
period, the project organizers have been ably supported by Teledyne RDI's exclusive
representative in Brazil, Mr. Herbert Fortes of GEOTRON.
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| The red-brown Solimoes (left) merges with
the black Rio Negro on the right at the birth of the Amazon. |
At Manaus 99, an international symposium in Brazil last November, many of the team
presented papers describing their ADCP work and results. We learned that across
sections several kilometers wide (and 1500 km from the Amazon mouth) the ADCP
recorded speeds of 1.5 m/s and discharges of 150000 m3. Together with a 5-6 m
drop in water level, discharge sinks to one third that volume in the dry season though
fast currents persist. We learned that ADCPs removed the need for echo sounders to
measure the cross sectional area of the discharge section. Also we learned that field
programs measuring sediment flux are guided by the ADCP's visual display of echo
intensity for more informed collection of water samples.
Particularly interesting ADCP data were included
in the report by Alain Laraque of IRD and his co-authors. The focus of the work was the
confluence near Manaus of two dissimilar rivers to form the Amazon. The ADCP data at
the confluence are stunning. Taken from Alain's report, we show here two TRANSECT screens
that vividly describe the contrasting yet preserved character of the two rivers after they
merge to form the mightiest river on the planet. Comparing similar regions in the two
displays, you can see the power of the ADCP data set for river research. The
red-brown Solimoes is a wide, fast, sediment-laden river that merges with the black
tannin-rich Rio Negro, which is a wide, slow river devoid of suspended sediment. At this
fascinating site, named Encontro Das Aquas (Meeting of the Waters), the rivers flow
side-by-side for a couple of kilometers steadfastly preserving their contrasting colors
and properties across a very sharp interface. Ultimately entropy prevails and by 10 km
downstream the visible contrast has disappeared.
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| The two merging
rivers have much different water velocities |
... and much different suspended
material. |
Thrilled with the quality and amount of data collected
with the Teledyne RDI ADCP, Dr. Laraque told us, "For the hydrologists, the use
of the ADCP is a revolution of the same magnitude as the discovery of the microscope
for biologists."
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