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  4. From Particles to Flocs: Revealing Where Flocculation Occurs in the Nearfield of a Negatively-Buoyant River Plume in a Large Lake (Lake Geneva)
 
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research article

From Particles to Flocs: Revealing Where Flocculation Occurs in the Nearfield of a Negatively-Buoyant River Plume in a Large Lake (Lake Geneva)

Piton, Violaine  
•
Lemmin, Ulrich  
•
Bourrin, Francois
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February 1, 2024
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans

The dynamics of sediments entering lakes in river plumes is virtually unknown. This field study provides unprecedented evidence of the initiation and evolution of suspended sediment flocculation in the nearfield of the negatively-buoyant Rh & ocirc;ne River plume, flowing as interflow in the thermocline of stratified Lake Geneva. Sediment floc property changes (formation, size, composition, shape) with depth and distance from the mouth, were determined by combining digital holographic camera LISST-HOLO data with full-depth in situ profiles of particle size (LISST-100X), density, turbidity, currents and water samples taken along the plume path. The total suspended matter volume of inflowing Rh & ocirc;ne River waters (similar to 155 mg l(-1)) mostly consisted of clays (<4 μm), very fine silts (4-8 μm) and small contributions of microflocs (20-100 μm). This composition was also found in the interflow plume core. Above the plume, in the epilimnion, fine silts, microflocs and numerous phytoplanktonic organisms (similar to 200 μm) were observed, representative of the lake background. High levels of shear (15-27 s(-1)) and turbulence occurred in the shear layer that formed between the interflow bottom and the hypolimnion below. It was found that macroflocs only formed in this shear layer. In the hypolimnion, sediment load was the lowest and macroflocs (up to similar to 300 μm) composed of inorganic particles were dominant. The size of the largest flocs was limited by the size of the smallest turbulent eddies determined by the Kolmogorov microscale. Floc 3D fractal dimensions of similar to 2.1-2.5 suggest an intermediate shape complexity between marine snow and sludge flocs.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2023JC019860
Web of Science ID

WOS:001154862800001

Author(s)
Piton, Violaine  
•
Lemmin, Ulrich  
•
Bourrin, Francois
•
Wynn, Htet Kyi  
•
Kindschi, Valentin  
•
Barry, David Andrew  
Date Issued

2024-02-01

Publisher

Amer Geophysical Union

Published in
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
Volume

129

Issue

2

Article Number

e2023JC019860

Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Flocculation

•

Interflow

•

Nearfield

•

Lake Geneva

•

Rhone River Plume

•

Turbulence

•

Shear Stress

•

Lisst

•

Lisst-Holo

•

Fractal Dimension

•

Flocs

•

Organic Matter

•

Sediment Dynamics

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECOL  
FunderGrant Number

Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne

Available on Infoscience
February 23, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/205452
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