Sedimentation and erosion data Mud motor
Datacite citation style:
Willemsen, Pim; Hanssen, J. (Jill); Vroom, J. (Julia); de Vet, Paul Lodewijk Maria; Van Maren, B. (Bas) (2019): Sedimentation and erosion data Mud motor. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/uuid:0d2b6e03-5f56-4678-af67-cd4634d4079d
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Dataset
Multiple measurements were conducted in the Mud Motor project (Baptist et al., 2019). Measurements of short-term sediment surface elevation changes are presented in the current dataset. Short-time surface elevation changes were determined with Surface Elevation Dynamics (SED) sensors. An extensive description with illustrations of this novel instrument is found in Hu et al. (2015). A SED-sensor is essentially a pin containing a semi-continuous array of 200 light sensitive cells that is inserted vertically in the sediment leaving approximately half of the measuring section above the seabed. The aboveground cells and belowground cells give high and low voltage outputs accordingly, resulting in a transition point at the bed level. The distance between two adjacent cells is 2 mm, and the measuring interval can be set from one second to a few hours, depending on the application. The measurement interval used in the current study was 30 min. The applied SED-sensors rely on daylight, and hence do not work overnight or when submerged. Updated sensors are being developed with hydro-acoustic sensors, to be able to measure overnight and when submerged. In the target area 5 SED-sensors were deployed from mid-July 2017 till August 2018. SED-sensors were placed at three locations at 100m distance from the dike toe or salt marsh edge (if present) and also at the bottom of a hollow and on top of a hummock at 60 m from the dike toe. The SEDs were checked approximately every eight weeks to ensure data collection, clean the sensors and retrieve the data. Collected raw data from the Surface Elevation Dynamics (SED) sensors were converted using well-documented software (Willemsen et al.,2018).
Zhan Hu, Walther Lenting, Daphne van der Wal, Tjeerd J. Bouma, Continuous monitoring bed-level dynamics on an intertidal flat: Introducing novel, stand-alone high-resolution SED-sensors, Geomorphology, Volume 245, 2015, Pages 223-230, ISSN 0169-555X, {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2015.05.027}.
Martin J. Baptist, T. Gerkema, B.C. van Prooijen, D.S. van Maren, M. van Regteren, K. Schulz, I. Colosimo, J. Vroom, T. van Kessel, B. Grasmeijer, P. Willemsen, K. Elschot, A.V. de Groot, J. Cleveringa, E.M.M. van Eekelen, F. Schuurman, H.J. de Lange, M.E.B. van Puijenbroek, Beneficial use of dredged sediment to enhance salt marsh development by applying a ‘Mud Motor’, Ecological Engineering, Volume 127, 2019, Pages 312-323, ISSN 0925-8574, {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2018.11.019}.
Willemsen, P. W. J. M., Borsje, B. W., Hulscher, S. J. M. H., Van Der Wal, D., Zhu, Z., Oteman, B., ... Bouma, T. J. (2018). Quantifying Bed Level Change at the Transition of Tidal Flat and Salt Marsh: Can We Understand the Lateral Location of the Marsh Edge? Journal of geophysical research. Earth surface, 123(10), 2509-2524. {https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JF004742}
history
- 2019-12-03 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.Centre for Research Data
format
media types: application/zip, text/plain, text/x-matlab
references
funding
- Dutch Waddenfonds, WF221847
organizations
Deltares, Unit Marine and Coastal Systems, Department of Ecosystem and Sediment Dynamics;Ecoshape
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