River Leith fluvial aufit. Final project report

This is the River Leith fluvial audit: Final project report produced by Lancaster University in 1998. Freeze cores extracted from the upper and lower ends of River Leith illustrate that the bed is highly compacted in the downstream reach. Fine material is locally derived from bedrock at depths of only 32 cms into the bed and in one core fine material is 66% of the extracted core. Levels of fines that are believed to be detrimental to fish are put at 20 to 30%. Reduced flow and stream power from water abstraction may lead to a greater infiltration of fine material if gravels are not regularly flushed through with flood flows. Infiltration of fine material can lead to river bed compaction and concretion. A small abstraction may have no effect on the morphology of a river if the reduced discharge is within the normal range of flows experienced. However if the impact on flows is small it is still possible that fine sediment problems will develop progressively and the effects may not be noticed for several years.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Orr, H., Quin, A.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Lancaster University 1998
Subjects:Ecology, Limnology, Management, England, River Leith, Inland waters, Rivers, Freshwater fish, Migratory species, Sediment cores, Fine material, Pollution effects, Environmental assessment, Water quality,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/27350
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