TECH TOOLS FOR UNDERSTANDING RIVERS AND FLOODPLAINS: MAPPING MIGRATION ON THE MIGHTY UPPER NISQUALLY RIVER
Homes sites with vistas, babbling brooks, and swimming holes are now at a premium. Often, regulators are faced with convincing arguments to allow development to occur adjacent to the river or on a bluff above. The Nisqually valley features, which include multiple river terraces of varying erodability, a history of large-scale channel avulsions, rapid channel changes, and disconnected levee-systems, make if difficult to interpret what the river will likely do in the future. An approach we used combined remote sensing technology and a new modeling process, a Relative Surface Model, to help regulators make better decisions on allowing riverside development and protecting existing infrastructure.
This case study will discuss some of the challenges of mapping gravel-bed rivers with high sediment and debris yields. It will also make recommendations of GIS/Remote Sensing tools to use. Finally we will display the Channel Centered: Relative SurfaceModel, created for the Nisqually River, which saw the brunt of the impact of the November 6th, 2007 storm event.