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  • South Atlantic Coastal Study (SACS) Calibration and Validation of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CSTORM) for Water Levels and Waves Part 3. Gulf of Mexico Domain

    Abstract: The US Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division, is currently engaged in the South Atlantic Coastal Study. One of the phases of this study is focused on conducting coastal storm modeling for the eastern and central Gulf of Mexico coastline of the United States. This technical report details the development of input for the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CSTORM) suite of models (WAVEWATCH III, ADCIRC, and STWAVE) for this project and presents the efforts made to calibrate model setups and validate results for eight historical tropical storm events impacting the study area.
  • South Atlantic Coastal Study (SACS) Calibration and Validation of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CSTORM-MS) for Water Levels and Waves: Part 2. South Atlantic Coast Domain

    Abstract: The US Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division, is currently engaged in the South Atlantic Coastal Study. One of the phases of this study is focused on conducting coastal storm modeling for the southern Atlantic coastline of the United States. This technical report details the development of input for the Coastal Storm Modeling System suite of models (WAVEWATCH III, ADCIRC, and STWAVE) for this project and presents the efforts made to calibrate model setups and validate results for seven historical tropical storm events impacting the study area.
  • South Atlantic Coastal Study (SACS) Calibration and Validation of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CSTORM-MS) for Water Levels and Waves: Part 1: Puerto Rico / US Virgin Island Domain

    Abstract: The US Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division, is currently engaged in the South Atlantic Coastal Study. One of the phases of this study is focused on conducting coastal storm modeling for the Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands. This technical report details the development of input for the Coastal Storm Modeling System suite of models (WAVEWATCH III, ADCIRC, and STWAVE) for this project and presents the efforts made to calibrate model setups and validate results for four historical tropical storm events impacting the study area.
  • Development and Testing of the FRAME Tool on a 200-Mile Reach of the Lower Mississippi River

    Abstract: Understanding the likely long-term evolution of the Lower Mississippi River (LMR) is a challenging mission for the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) that remains difficult for conventional river engineering models. A new type of model is currently in development, tasked with revealing uncertainty-bounded trends in sediment transport and channel morphology over annual, decadal, and centennial timescales. The Future River Analysis and Management Evaluation (FRAME) tool is being designed with river managers and planners in mind to provide exploratory insights into plausible river futures and their potential impacts. A unique attribute of the tool is its hybrid interfacing of traditional one-dimensional hydraulic and sediment transport modeling with geomorphic rules for characterizing the morphological response. This report documents the development of a FRAME test-bed model for a 200-mile reach of the Mississippi River upstream of Vicksburg, Mississippi. This testbed allowed development and testing of the prototype FRAME tool in a data-rich environment. This work identified proposed future developments to provide river managers and planners with a fully functional tool for delivering insights on long-term morphological response in river channels across a variety of spatial and temporal scales.
  • Lower James River Sediment Transport Modeling: Jordan Point

    Abstract: US Army Corps of Engineers–Norfolk District (NAO) requested assistance from the US Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) to examine currently used placement sites within the James River, Virginia, initiative area, determine potential risk to critical environmental receptors during placement, and predict the life cycle of the placement sites. The focus of the analysis within this work is the Jordan Point placement site. The far-field, fate-transport modeling at Jordan Point shows relatively low maximum values of suspended sediment concentration (less than 40 mg/L) and deposition values (less than 0.2 cm). Material that is placed at Jordan Point appears to quickly disperse through the system, depositing in thin layers at specific areas. The life-cycle analysis performed for the Jordon Point placement site yielded an estimated useable project life of the Jordan Point placement sites of 26 years with an uncertainty of ±4 years. Analysis showed that 97% of the net sediment deposition in the navigation channel in proximity to this site is from the upper James River, 2% is from downstream sources, and 1% is from the two Jordan Point placement sites.
  • Adaptive Hydraulics (AdH) Version 4.7.1 Sediment Transport User’s Manual: A 2D Modeling System Developed by the Coastal and Hydraulics Laboratory

    Abstract: Guidelines are presented for using the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Adaptive Hydraulics (AdH) modeling software to model 2D shallow water problems with sediment transport (i.e., AdH linked to the Sediment Transport Library [SEDLIB]). This manual describes the inputs necessary to use the SEDLIB sediment transport library from within AdH, to perform coupled hydrodynamic, sediment, and morphological computations. The SEDLIB sediment transport library is intended to be of general use and, as such, examples are given for basic sediment transport of cohesive, noncohesive, and mixed suspended sediment loads and bedload.
  • Numerical Modeling of Supercritical Flow in the Los Angeles River: Part II: Existing Conditions Adaptive Hydraulics Numerical Model Study

    Abstract: The Los Angeles District of the US Army Corps of Engineers is assisting the City of Los Angeles with restoration efforts on the Los Angeles River. The city wishes to restore portions of the channelized river to a more natural state with riparian green spaces for both wildlife and public recreation usage. The Los Angeles River provides an important role from a flood-control perspective, and functionality needs to be preserved when contemplating system modifications. This report details the development of an Adaptive Hydraulics numerical model capable of modeling this complex system consisting of both subcritical and supercritical flow regimes. The model geometry was developed to represent the existing conditions system for future usage in quantifying the impact associated with proposed restoration alternatives. Due to limited hydraulic data in the study area, an extensive model validation to observed data was not possible. A model was developed and simulated using the most appropriate input parameters. Given the lack of measured data for model validation, an extensive number of sensitivity simulations were completed to identify the most impactful parameters and quantify a reasonable level of confidence in the model results based on the uncertainty in the model inputs.
  • Comite Diversion Numerical Model Study

    Abstract: The Comite River diversion project is designed to reduce flooding along the Comite and Amite Rivers during flood events by diverting flow from the Comite River into the Mississippi River above Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The flow is diverted from the Comite River along a diversion canal to the Lilly Bayou Control structure. This structure allows the Comite River flow to enter the Mississippi River floodplain. A numerical model was created to evaluate the impacts associated with this addition of water to the Mississippi River. A 2D Adaptive Hydraulics numerical model was created to quantify the system impacts associated with the diverted flow in conjunction with possible system modifications to control the flow pathway. The impact of the diversion was determined to be heavily dependent on the flow and stage of the Mississippi River. At higher stages and flows, the flow diverted by the Lilly Bayou Control structure is negligible in relation to the much larger Mississippi River flow and therefore the impacts of the added flow are significantly less than at lower Mississippi River stages. At lower Mississippi River flows and stages, the added flow from the Lilly Bayou Control structure has a larger impact on the inundation due to the larger relative amount of diverted flow in relation to the Mississippi River. Ultimately, the diverted Comite River flow has some incremental increase in water levels at all Mississippi River stages.
  • Getting Started with FUNWAVE-TVD: Troubleshooting Guidance and Recommendations

    Abstract: This technical note reviews some common initialization errors when first getting started with the numerical wave model, FUNWAVE-TVD (Fully Nonlinear Wave model–Total Variation Diminishing), and provides guidance for correcting these errors. Recommendations for troubleshooting the source or cause of instabilities in an application of the model as well as recognizing the difference between physical and numerical instabilities are also outlined and discussed. In addition, a quick start troubleshooting guide is provided in the Appendix. This guidance is particularly useful for novice to intermediate users of FUNWAVE-TVD who are less familiar with the workflow of setting up the model and interpreting error output statements.
  • Coastal Modeling System User’s Manual

    Abstract: The Coastal Modeling System (CMS) is a suite of coupled 2D numerical models for simulating nearshore waves, currents, water levels, sediment transport, morphology change, and salinity and temperature. Developed by the Coastal Inlets Research Program of the US Army Corps of Engineers, the CMS provides coastal engineers and scientists a PC-based, easy-to-use, accurate, and efficient tool for understanding of coastal processes and for designing and managing of coastal inlets research, navigation projects, and sediment exchange between inlets and adjacent beaches. The present technical report acts as a user guide for the CMS, which contains comprehensive information on model theory, model setup, and model features. The detailed descriptions include creation of a new project, configuration of model grid, various types of boundary conditions, representation of coastal structures, numerical methods, and coupled simulations of waves, hydrodynamics, and sediment transport. Pre- and postmodel data processing and CMS modeling procedures are also described through operation within a graphic user interface—the Surface Water Modeling System.