Abstract

Abstract. Knowledge of water-surface velocities in rivers is useful for understanding a range of river processes. In cold regions, river-ice break up and the related downstream transport of ice debris is often the most important hydrological event of the year, leading to flood levels that typically exceed those for the open-water period and to strong consequences for river infrastructure and ecology. Accurate and complete surface-velocity fields on rivers have rarely been produced. Here, we track river ice debris over a time period of about one minute, which is the typical time lag between the two or more images that form a stereo data set in spaceborne, along-track optical stereo mapping. Using a series of nine stereo scenes from the US/Japanese Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) onboard the NASA Terra spacecraft with 15 m image resolution, we measure the ice and water velocity field over a 620 km-long reach of the lower Lena River, Siberia, just above its entry into the Lena delta. Careful analysis and correction of higher-order image and sensor errors enables an accuracy of ice-debris velocities of up to 0.04 m s−1 from the ASTER data. Maximum ice or water speeds, respectively, reach up to 2.5 m s−1 at the time of data acquisition, 27 May 2011 (03:30 UTC). Speeds show clear along-stream undulations with a wavelength of about 21 km that agree well with variations in channel width and with the location of sand bars along the river reach studied. The methodology and results of this study could be valuable to a number of disciplines requiring detailed information about river flow, such as hydraulics, hydrology, river ecology and natural-hazard management.

Highlights

  • Measuring surface-velocity fields on rivers has been attempted for decades for scientific and applied purposes

  • Related water fluxes and forces lead to erosion, transport or sedimentation of matter in the river, at the riverbed or its banks, with implications for river ecology, fluvial geomorphology and human infrastructure (Kääb and Prowse, 2011)

  • For our study site over the Lena River in Siberia (Fig. 3), we apply a series of nine satellite stereo image pairs from ASTER with 15 m ground resolution and 55 s time lag

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Summary

Introduction

Measuring surface-velocity fields on rivers has been attempted for decades for scientific and applied purposes. Related water fluxes and forces lead to erosion, transport or sedimentation of matter in the river, at the riverbed or its banks, with implications for river ecology, fluvial geomorphology and human infrastructure (Kääb and Prowse, 2011). In cold regions, such needs are enlarged by effects of river ice, the break-up of which often creates the most important hydrological event of the year (Prowse, 1994, 2005). Typically less dynamic than break-up, freeze-up can create a similar set of bio-geophysical problems on many cold-region rivers

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