Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the highest bottom shear stress, induced by wind in an area of Hamilton Harbour, Ontario, Canada known as Randle Reef. The study was conducted in support of a component of a contaminated sediment remediation plan utilizing a thin layer of sand to manage contaminated sediments. Toward this end, four acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) were deployed at two locations in the study region to measure velocity profiles for the purpose of indirectly measuring bottom shear stress (BSS) and model verification. There is no easy way to directly measure BSS in the field. As a result, the use of the logarithmic-profile method from the ADCP measured high resolution velocity profiles in the bottom layer was explored. This approach, according to our best knowledge, has not been published for a wind driven flow in a small open water body. To use the indirectly measured BSS to estimate the highest BSS in the study area, a three-dimensional hydrodynamic model was adopted to provide the spatial and temporal information of the bottom flow. The results showed that the modeled and measured flow velocity components agreed reasonably well at most of the water depths with the correlation coefficients being greater than 0.6. However, agreements between the modeled and measured bottom flow speeds were worse than expected due to the error contributions from both the modeled velocity components. Therefore, the modeled flow speed required rescaling based on ADCP velocity measurements before it could be deemed reliable. This is especially important in estimation of the BSS with a quadratic formula because the calculated BSS is proportional to the square of the speed.

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