Podcasts by Category
- 28 - Peter Wilcock on Gravel Bed Rivers, Partial Transport, Armor Layer Persistence and Channel Design (Plus Wilcock & Crowe)
When HEC hired me to add sediment transport to HEC-RAS almost 20 years ago now, I inherited a set of sediment transport functions that were mostly developed in the early to mid 20th century. These were – and continue to be – important equations.But when I sat down with the RAS team To talk about the new science I was excited to include in a river mechanics model.I pulled out the same binder I brought to this interview We are wrapping up our third season of the podcast, and our...
Tue, 04 Jun 2024 - 27 - Mary Power on River Ecology, Disturbance, and Inverted Pyramids
tDr. Power is a food web ecologist at UC Berkeley, where she leads the Power lab which has compiled careful, long term data sets in the Angelo Reserve in Northern CA.In addition to her early work, in Panama and the Ozarks - which we touch on briefly - Dr. Power’s multi-decadal data sets on the Eel River, have yielded remarkable findings about how food webs function in gravel bed rivers…and spoiler alert, it sometimes involves the sorts of things we tend to talk about here…like the grave...
Fri, 19 Apr 2024 - 26 - Alain Recking on Sediment Sorting, Transport, and Relative Roughness in Mountain Rivers
Dr Alain Recking has quantified gravel bed transport with just about all the tools available to our discipline.In addition to substantial field work- Dr. Recking has done some important and influential flume experiments.We have talked and will talk about hiding and armoring quite a bit in this podcast, because they are difficult ideas, that are hard to measure and simulate, and critical to gravel bed processes.But Dr. Recking’s contributions to this vertical sorting conversation destabi...
Thu, 04 Apr 2024 - 25 - Sediment Modeling Failure Modes and Best Practices with Four Model Developers
A couple years ago, my agency asked me to write some guidance on sediment modeling, so, I reached out to the morphological modelers I knew, and particularly the model developers who write the morphological model code other people use.I asked them about the common failure modes they have seen and best practices they teach, and realized we had all essentially spent a decade or two, learning the same principles. So when the US federal agencies held their periodic Federal interagency sedimen...
Thu, 21 Mar 2024 - 24 - Tony Thomas on the Origin of Sediment Modeling and Insights from >55 Years of Sediment Studies
I’ve heard people call Tony the godfather of Sediment Transport Modeling and - as you’ll hear in our conversation - he very well may be the first person to use a computer to answer an engineering scale sediment question.But most people about my age and older, know Tony for developing the first generalized sediment model. He was part of the original team here at the Hydrologic Engineering Center (HEC) where he developed HEC6, a 1D sediment transport model that was industry standard for d...
Fri, 08 Mar 2024 - 23 - Jim Selegean and the "Classic Paper Draft"
Dr. Jim Selegean is the Sediment Transport Specialist at the Corps Detroit District where he studies the rivers and sediment loads into the great lakes as well as inland costal processes. He is also a professor at Wayne State in Detroit. And that joint position has helped him mentor many young scientists and engineers throughout the years, geomorphically trained Hydraulic engineers who not only currently populate the Detroit district but also includes what we call the Detroit diasp...
Thu, 22 Feb 2024 - 22 - Astrid Blom on Incision on the Rhine, Gravel-Sand Transitions, and Vertical Bedform Sorting
Dr. Astrid Blom is a professor Civil Engineering & Geosciences at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands is perhaps best known for her recent reach and rive scale work, modeling hundreds of kilometers, sometimes for hundreds or thousands of years. These models explore the long-term equilibrium state of river responses to human modifications and the alternate potential futures associated with different climate change scenarios and management practices. Most of her rec...
Fri, 09 Feb 2024 - 21 - Marcello Garcia (part 2) on Sedimentation Hazards, the Bulle Effect, and Transport Paradigms
In the previous episode, we talked to Dr. Marcelo Garcia about the astonishing compilation of sediment science he edited, the ASCE Sedimentation Manual. In this episode, we turn to some of his work, covering a wide range of topics, but landing for a while on sedimentation hazards including mud and debris flows, the Bulle Effect, and two transport paradigms (the Bagnold vs the Einstein approaches). Dr. Garcia is professor at the University of Illinois-Urbana and the director ...
Fri, 26 Jan 2024 - 20 - Marcelo Garcia Shares Some Sediment Stories and Discusses Manual of Practice 110
Dr. Marcelo Garcia holds an endowed chair in Hydraulics at the University of Illinois-Urbana – where he has taught for more than thirty years, and runs the remarkable Ven Te Chow hydraulic and sediment laboratory. His award page reads like a who’s-who of the Legends in our field. These include but are not limited to:The Einstein Award, the Rouse Award, and the Yalin lifetime achievement award.And he is a Distinguished member of the American Society of Civil Engineers and ...
Sat, 20 Jan 2024 - 19 - David Montgomery on High Gradient River Mechanics (Classification, Incipient Motion, and Wood) and Sediment Impacts on Human History
Dr. David Montgomery has been so prolific, that for several years I actually thought he was two people:First, Dr. D. Montgomery is a well known geomorphologist from the University of Washington (and a 2008 MacArthur Fellow) whose name is on much of the seminal, high-gradient channel transport and classification literature. And then there David Montgomery, the narrative non-fiction author from Seattle who wrote books like Dirt, The Rocks Don’t Lie, and The Hidden Half of Nature.It a...
Wed, 03 Jan 2024 - 18 - Season 3 Preview Episode (with guest excerpts)
We plan to start releasing season three on the first week of the new year. It was a fun and helpful season, which I'm looking forward to releasing.This preview overviews the guests and topics of the season with fun pull quotes from most of the guests.Look for the next episode the first week of January.This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.Stanford Gibson (HEC Sediment Specialist) hosts.Mike Loretto edited the episode and wrote and performed the music.V...
Wed, 20 Dec 2023 - 17 - Jennifer Bountry on Dam Removal
Jennifer Bountry leads the Sedimentation and River Hydraulics Branch of the US Bureau of Reclamation's Technical Service Center in Denver, CO where she helped to coordinate and draft an interagency guidance document on scaling sediment transport analyses to the project risk. It is a helpful and important document that I recommend to any group moving towards a dam removal, to help them triage the analyses required for their decommissioning. Jennifer was also involved in the analyse...
Thu, 07 Sep 2023 - 16 - John Shelley and Paul Boyd on Reservoir Sediment Management in the US
In the first two episodes of this season Dr. Annandale and Dr. Morris talked about reservoir sediment management practices all over the world. But examples in the continental US were noticeably absent. Reservoir sediment management in the US has encountered some challenges that have made US agencies slow to adopt these practices. But Dr. Paul Boyd and Dr. John Shelley are involved in more reservoir sediment management initiative in the United States than anyone I know. ...
Thu, 24 Aug 2023 - 15 - Greg Morris on Reservoir Sediment Management Methods
Dr. Greg Morris wrote the first text on reservoir sediment management, which generated the categories and set the parameters for a lot of the work and conversations surrounding the topic in the last three decades. Most of us who work in this field got our start with his Reservoir Sedimentation Handbook. But he has also likely worked on more reservoirs with sedimentation issues - in more settings - than anyone else and has an uncommon reservoir of practical - on the ground - wisdom ...
Thu, 10 Aug 2023 - 14 - George Annandale on the Reservoir Sedimentation Management: Motivations, Economics, and Options
Dr. George Annandale has been advocating for forward thinking about global water supply for decades...which is more connected to sedimentation processes than you might imagine. In his book, Quenching the Thirst he makes the case that reservoir sedimentation is one of the major challenges to future water supply and managing sediment at new and existing projects is a critical component of sustainable development.Dr. Annandale has worked on multiple projects at various scales both as a con...
Fri, 28 Jul 2023 - 13 - Season 2 Trailer: Reservoir Sediment Management Mini-Season
The RSM River Mechanics Podcast is returning with a summer mini-season on reservoir sediment management. We recorded four episodes on this topic with some remarkable guests, so we're running them together this summer as a shorter "Season 2" before we release a full season this fall. Episodes include:Ep 2:1 – Dr. George Annandale on the Motivation, Economics, and Approaches to Reservoir Sediment ManagementEp 2:2 – Dr. Greg Morris on Reservoir Sediment Management Techniques and Appl...
Sun, 23 Jul 2023 - 12 - David Biedenharn on River Mechanics Forensics and His Approach to River Science
We are wrapping up season 1 with the second half of our first interview. This is the rest of my conversation with US Army Corps of Engineers River Mechanics and River Engineering Subject-Matter Expert, Dr. David Biedenharn.If you have feedback on this season, recommendations for season 2 guests, or want to weigh in on our classic paper survey, there is a google form on the podcast website below.This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.Stanford Gibson (HEC...
Fri, 03 Mar 2023 - 11 - Pablo Espinoza Giron and Pedro David Barrera Crespo on the Generational Erosion Event on the Rio Coca
The regressive erosion on the Rio Coca (Ecuador) may be the morphological event of our generation. But, because it happened in February 2020, when there was not much room in the news cycle, most people haven't heard about it...even in the geomorph community. In this episode we try to rectify that. I talked to Pablo Espinoza Giron and Pedro David Barrera Crespo, two of the scientists/engineers who have been working on the Ecuadorian response since the beginning. Thi...
Thu, 16 Feb 2023 - 10 - Richard Iverson on Debris Flows
Dr. Richard Iverson led the mud and debris flow investigations at the USGS Cascade Volcano Observatory for years, including large scale flume and numerical work that unlocked a remarkable number of new insights about these high-concentration flows. His findings have influenced the way I think about these events more than any other source.With the rising interest in post-wildfire debris flow hazards, these events are getting more attention, so these findings have never been m...
Thu, 02 Feb 2023 - 9 - Katie Brutsche on RSM Principles and Practices
Dr. Katie Brutsche led the Regional Sediment Management Program for several years. Regional Sediment Management is the "RSM" in the title of this podcast, and the reason this project exists. RSM is the aspirational conceptual model of the Corps of Engineer's sediment management over the last couple decades. We talk about the principles of RSM, the RSM process, some example projects, sediment budgets, and some surprising stats that you probably don't know about dredging.Befor...
Fri, 20 Jan 2023 - 8 - Chris Nygaard on Dam Removal Modeling, Mt Saint Helens Sediment, and Restoration Projects
I recently described Chris Nygaard as the Corps’ BSPS, our 'Big Sediment Pulse Specialist.' He led sediment analysis and modeling on the Corps’ latest evaluation of Mount Saint Helens downstream-sediment impacts and a dam removal alternative on the Snake River. In those projects he analyzed the fate of sediment pulses (real or hypothetical) on the order of hundreds-of-millions of tons. But Chris also recently spent a couple years as a project engineer with Bonneville P...
Thu, 05 Jan 2023 - 7 - Bonus Short: SEDHYD is Coming
We plan to occasionally push out short bonus episodes between our longform conversations. This first bonus short is a conversation with two of the organizers of the Federal Interagency Sediment Conference, which will be in St Louis in May. SEDHYD is a conference that specializes in applied river mechanics and engineering topics, and has a lot of overlap with the topics of the conversations we're having on this feed. So I invited two of the conference leaders to talk about i...
Sat, 31 Dec 2022 - 6 - John Remus on the "Big Muddy" and the "Sediment Avengers"
John Remus leads a team of Corps of Engineers, sediment and river engineering, subject-matter experts. This team (which I like to call "the Sediment Avengers") deploys to the Corps' most problematic sediment and morphological challenges around the country. And that's a fitting role for the man who manages the river sometimes called the "Big Muddy." In his "day job," John is currently the the chief of the Corps Missouri River Basin Water Management Division where he lea...
Thu, 22 Dec 2022 - 5 - Joanna Curran on Gravel Bed Rivers, Wilcock and Crowe, and Step-Pool Systems
Dr. Joanna Curran is probably best know for her early, academic, laboratory work on step-pool systems, gravel cluster turbulence, and the Wilcock and Crowe transport function. But she has since worked on northwestern rivers with several engineering firms, and most recently joined the Corps of Engineers at the Seattle District. This academic/private sector/public sector perspective and experimental/numerical/field experience gives her a couple different multi-perspective view...
Wed, 07 Dec 2022 - 4 - Ron Copeland on Analytical Channel Design, the Laursen-Copeland Transport Function, and Mississippi Morphology
Ron Copeland has worked for the Corps of Engineers for over 5 decades, 52 years at the Los Angeles district and the Corps' Coastal and Hydraulics lab in Vicksburg Mississippi. He also worked for 10 years as a principle engineer at Mobile Boundary Hydraulics, which was the premiere 1D sediment transport modeling firm for decades. But Dr. Copeland has not only been on a very short list of the very best 1D sediment transport modelers for decades, he also developed several equations and alg...
Thu, 24 Nov 2022 - 3 - Molly Wood on Sediment Data
Molly Wood is the National Sediment Specialist for the USGS Water Resources Mission Area’s Observing Systems Division. She develops policies and methods for measuring fluvial sediment transport and for computing streamflow using complex rating techniques. She also teaches national and international training courses on surface-water and sediment data collection.I have lost track of just how much of what I understand about sediment data I've learned from Molly. But a substantial percentag...
Wed, 09 Nov 2022 - 2 - David Biedenharn on the Demonstration Project and River Engineering
Dr. David Biedenharn is a river mechanics, subject matter expert, with the Corps of Engineer's Coastal and Hydraulic Laboratory. He is a professional engineer with over forty years of experience in hydraulics, river engineering, sedimentation, channel restoration, and fluvial geomorphology. Dr. Biedenharn also teaches in the Tulane Department of Science and Engineering, where he helped develop their River Science and Engineering Program. But the main reason we invited David t...
Fri, 28 Oct 2022 - 1 - River Mechanics Podcast Trailer
This is a preview of the RSM River Mechanics Podcast, which features conversations about sediment, river processes, and fluvial geomorphology. The trailer includes excerpts from several of the Season 1 guests.This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.Stanford Gibson (HEC Sediment Specialist) hosts.Mike Loretto edited the episode and wrote and performed the music.Video shorts and other bonus content are available at the podcast website:https://www.hec.usace...
Mon, 17 Oct 2022
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