Proceedings of the EIGHTH Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference

April 2–6, 2006 Reno, Nevada USA

Sponsored by the Subcommittee on Sedimentation (a subcommittee of the Advisory Committee on Water Information)

About the Conferences Go To Table of Contents PROCEEDINGS OF THE EIGHTH FEDERAL INTERAGENCY SEDIMENTATION CONFERENCE (8thFISC) April 2 – 6, 2006 RENO, NEVADA Subcommittee on Sedimentation

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) American Society of Civil Engineering (ASCE) Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) Colorado Water Resources Institute Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Forest Service (USFS) Geological Survey (USGS) National Park Service (NPS) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE) Universities Council on Water Resources

PREFACE These proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference contain over 190 technical papers. This conference is sponsored by the Subcommittee on Sedimentation, which is chartered under the Advisory Committee on Water Information. The ACWI and all of its subcommittees function according to the requirements of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, which encourages nonfederal participation. Member agencies of the Subcommittee on Sedimentation, as shown above, are therefore a mix of Federal agencies and non-federal organizations. The enclosed technical papers document scheduled oral presentations and poster sessions. The proceedings have been prepared in advance of the conference so that all papers could be available to conference participants.

The Subcommittee has organized seven previous interagency sedimentation conferences: 1st 1947 Denver, CO 4th 1986 Las Vegas, NV 2nd 1963 Jackson, MS 5th 1991 Las Vegas, NV 3rd 1976 Denver, CO 6th 1996 Las Vegas, NV 7th 2001 Reno, NV

Page ii Go To Table of Contents The first four meetings were conferences involving federal agencies only: papers and discussions were given only by the staff of the agencies on the Subcommittee and by individuals engaged in cooperative sedimentation work with the agencies. Beginning with the Fifth and continuing through with the 8th FISC, however, a limited number of technical papers are being presented by nonfederal agencies in order to capture the full spectrum of sedimentation issues that relate to the condition of natural resources and their management.

The 8th FISC was held in conjunction with 3rd Federal Interagency Hydrologic Modeling Conference under the umbrella of the Joint Interagency Sedimentation Conference, with the theme “Interdisciplinary Solutions for Watershed Sustainability.” It brings together professionals and others from (1) the federal government, (2) state and local agencies, (3) universities, (4) the private sector, and (5) international organizations. Since 1946, the Subcommittee on Sedimentation has focused on interagency coordination.

Organizing Committee for the 8th FISC Chairman: Jerry M. Bernard USDA-NRCS Technical Program Committee Chair: Jerry W. Webb USACE

Presentations: Marie M. Garsjo USDA-NRCS

Organizing Committee, Joint Federal Interagency Conference

Doug Glysson, Joint Conference Chair, US Geological Survey Paula Makar, Operations Chair, US Bureau of Reclamation Francisco Simões, Proceedings Coordinator, US Geological Survey Jeff Rieker; Registration Chair, US Bureau of Reclamation Gary Barbato, Field Trip Coordinator, National Weather Service Tom Donaldson, Poster/Demonstration Coordinator, National Weather Service Larry Schmidt, Local Contact, US Forest Service (retired) Joe Treadway, Exhibitor Coordinator, US Geological Survey Jayantha Obeysekera, Short Course Coordinator, South Florida Water Mgt. Dist. Roland Viger, Computer/AV Equipment Coordinator, US Geological Survey Christi Young, Publicity Coordinator, US Bureau of Reclamation

ISBN 0-9779007-1-1

Page iii Go To Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS

Sediment Yield and Transport Stream Restoration Sediment and Wildlife Habitat Gully Erosion Watershed Modeling Sediment Research Reservoir Sedimentation Sediment Surrogates Dam Removal and Rehabilitation Turbidity and Sediment Tracers Geomorphology Instrumentation Monitoring Farm Bill / Conservation POSTERS/DEMOS

SEDIMENT YIELD & TRANSPORT

Title Author(s) Paper DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF GSTAR-1D Jianchun Huang, Blair P. Greimann, and Travis Bauer  APPLICATION OF GSTAR-1D SEDIMENT Christopher L. Holmquist-Johnson TRANSPORT MODEL ON THE RIO GRANDE, NM –  SAN ACACIA DIVERSION DAM TO ELEPHANT BUTTE RESERVOIR BUREAU OF RECLAMATION AUTOMATED David A. Raff and Chris MODIFIED EINSTEIN PROCEDURE (BORAMEP) Holmquist-Johnson  PROGRAM FOR COMPUTING TOTAL SEDIMENT LOAD FRAMEWORK OF YEARLY STREAM SEDIMENT Aaron Byrd INPUT  PREDICTING SEDIMENT DISCHARGE FROM Joseph R. Amann and Arne FOREST ROADS: THE ROLE OF SURFACE Skaugset  RUNOFF AND RAINFALL INTENSITY EROSION CONTROL IN COTTON PRODUCTION R. F. Cullum, G. V. Wilson, J. R. THROUGH THE USE OF ULTRA NARROW ROW Johnson, K. C. McGregor  HILLSIDE EROSION AND SMALL WATERSHED Peter M. Wohlgemuth SEDIMENT YIELD FOLLOWING A WILDFIRE ON  THE SAN DIMAS EXPERIMENTAL FOREST, SOUTHERN CA Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

SIMULATION OF FLOOD FLOW AND SEDIMENT Andrey Shvidchenko, Brad Hall, TRANSPORT ON ALLUVIAL FANS OF COACHELLA Joseph Howard, Rene Vermeeren,  VALLEY, CALIFORNIA and Cuong Ly SEDIMENT TRANSPORT COMPUTATIONS WITH Stanford Gibson, Gary Brunner, HEC-RAS Steve Piper, and Mark Jensen  IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SEDIMENT IMPACT Stanford A. Gibson and Charles D. ASSESSMENT MODEL (SIAM) IN HEC-RAS Little Jr.  SEDIMENT INVESTIGATION AND STABLE Martin J. Teal and Phillip A. CHANNEL DESIGN FOR THE LOWER MUD RIVER Anderson  SIAM-UK SEDIMENT BUDGETING PROGRAM TO Ian M. Tomes, Oliver P. Harmar, ASSESS INTERACTIONS BETWEEN FLOOD and Colin R. Thorne  DEFENCE INFRASTRUCTURE AND SEDIMENT DYNAMICS IN A FLUVIAL SYSTEM PERFORMANCE OF BED LOAD TRANSPORT Jeffrey J. Barry, John M. EQUATIONS IN MOUNTAIN GRAVEL-BED RIVERS: Buffington, John G. King, and  A RE-ANALYSIS Peter Goodwin PREDICTABILITY OF BEDLOAD RATING AND Kristin Bunte, Steven R. Abt, and FLOW COMPETENCE CURVES FROM BED Kurt W. Swingle  ARMORING, STREAM WIDTH AND BASIN AREA RADIONUCLIDE AND RARE EARTH ELEMENT A.P. Stubblefield, C. Fondran, TRACERS OF EROSIONAL PROCESSES ON THE M.E. Ketterer, G. Matisoff, and  PLOT SCALE P.J. Whiting DREDGED MATERIAL MANAGEMENT IN A Craig Vogt, Barry Holiday, WATERSHED CONTEXT: SEEKING INTEGRATED Elizabeth Kim and Molly Madden  SOLUTIONS A FARM SEDIMENT TRAP AND POND IN COLUSA Jack Alderson COUNTY, CA  USE OF MONITORING DATA TO EVALUATE K. Ostrowski, J. Boll, E.S. Brooks, WATERSHED MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN A and J. Newson  MIXED-LAND USE WATERSHED IN NORTHERN IDAHO PRELIMINARY SEDIMENT BUDGETS FOR FOUR Sean Eagan, Carolyn Hunaker, WATERSHEDS AT THE KINGS RIVER Abbey Korte, Sarah Martin, and  EXPERIMENTAL WATERSHED IN THE SOUTHERN Lee McDonald SIERRA NEVADA CALIBRATION OF THE WATBAL SEDIMENT AND Dick Jones and Rick Patten WATER YIELD MODEL CLEARWATER NATIONAL  FOREST ESTIMATING SEDIMENT YIELD IN THE SOUTHERN Paul Bolstad, Andrew Jenks, Mark APPALACHIANS USING WCS-SED Riedel, and James M. Vose  RECONSTRUCTING RESERVOIR STRATIGRAPHY Scott A. Wright and Noah P. FROM HYDROLOGIC HISTORY AND SIMPLE Snyder  TRANSPORT CALCULATIONS: ENGLEBRIGHT LAKE, YUBA RIVER, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SEDIMENT TRANSPORT RESEARCH IN SHALLOW M.J.M. Romkens, S.N. Prasad, OVERLAND FLOW and S. Madhusudana Rao  CHESTER MORSE LAKE OUTLET CHANNEL Hans Hadley, Thomas R. ALTERNATIVES EVALUATION Grindeland, and Dalong “Daniel” 

Page v Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

Huang

GEOMORPHOLOGY

Title Author(s) Paper BED FORMS IN THE LOW FLOW CONVEYANCE Drew C. Baird CHANNEL  PATH OF GRAVEL MOVEMENT IN A COARSE Kristin Bunte, John P. Potyondy, STREAM CHANNEL Steven R. Abt, Kurt W. Swingle  COMPARISON OF SEDIMENT-TRANSPORT AND David J. Topping, David M. Rubin, BAR-RESPONSE RESULTS FROM THE 1996 AND John C. Schmidt, Joseph E. Hazel,  2004 CONTROLLED EXPERIMENTS ON THE Theodore S. Melis, Scott A. COLORADO RIVER IN GRAND CANYON Wright, Matt Kaplinski, Amy E Draut, and Michael J. Breedlove STREAMBANK STABILITY ASSESSMENT IN Mark S. Riedel, Kenneth N. GRAZED RIPARIAN AREAS Brooks and Elon S. Verry  GEOMORPHIC RESPONSE TO A DAM FAILURE IN Alex Brunton, Rob Nairn and Jim THE DEAD RIVER WATERSHED, MICHIGAN: Selegean  INTEGRATION OF EMPIRICAL AND ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES IN A GIS FRAMEWORK TEMPORAL VARIATIONS OF SCOUR AND FILL J.S.Conaway PROCESSES AT SELECTED BRIDGE SITES IN  ALASKA GEOMORPHIC CONTEXT FOR HISTORICAL Faith A. Fitzpatrick, Kirsten A. DETERMINATION OF SEDIMENT SOURCES, Cahow-Scholtes, and Marie C.  TRANSPORT, AND DEPOSITION IN THE BAD RIVER Peppler WATERSHED, BAD RIVER RESERVATION, WISCONSIN A RIVER EVOLUTION OF ADJACENT STABLE AND Brett Jordan, W.K. Annable, C.C. UNSTABLE URBAN WATERSHEDS IN SAN JOSE, Watson  CALIFORNIA INTEGRATING TWO SEDIMENTATION RATE Laura L. Keefer, Richard A. Cahill, METHODS TO DETERMINE CHANNEL Richard L. Allgire  ADJUSTMENT RATES EFFECTS OF REGULARLY REVERSING ENERGY Kevin Knuuti GRADIENTS ON SEDIMENT TRANSPORT IN A  TIDAL WETLAND SYSTEM

Page vi Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

RECENT CHANNEL INCISION AND FLOODPLAIN Tamara Massong, Paul Tashjian, EVOLUTION WITHIN THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE, NM and Paula Makar  TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN ROOT- Natasha Pollen and Andrew REINFORCEMENT OF STREAMBANKS: Simon  ACCOUNTING FOR GEOTECHNICAL PROPERTIES AND MOISTURE MORPHOLOGIC EVOLUTION IN THE USGS Jonathan Nelson, Richard SURFACE WATER MODELING INTERFACE McDonald, and Paul Kinzel  CHANNEL MIGRATION MODEL FOR MEANDERING Timothy J. Randle RIVERS  ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE GRAVEL BAR Frank Reckendorf SCALPINGN  COMPUTATIONAL MODEL FOR THE Craig B. Boroughs, Steven R. Abt, DEVELOPMENT OF SEDIMENT PLUGS IN and Drew Baird  ALLUVIAL RIVERS

SEDIMENT RESEARCH

Title Author(s) Paper HOW INCIPIENT MOTION DETERMINATION Muhammad Ashiq and John C JUDGMENT AFFECTS DIFFERENT PARAMETERS Doering  IN SEDIMENT TRANSPORT INVESTIGATION A REGIONAL PROTOCOL FOR EVALUATING THE Roger Ryder and Pamela Edwards EFFECTIVENESS OF FORESTRY BEST  MANAGEMENT PRACTICES AT CONTROLLING EROSION AND SEDIMENTATION FLOODS AND SEDIMENT YIELDS FROM RECENT Daniel G. Neary, Gerald J. WILDFIRES IN ARIZONA Gottfried, Jan L. Beyers, and Peter  F. Ffolliott ESTIMATION OF SEDIMENT AND NUTRIENT LOADS J.P. Schubauer-Berigan, W.B. FROM MIXED LAND USE WATERSHEDS IN THE Richardson, P. Hughes, L.  UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN AND THE ROLE Bartsch, J. Cavanaugh, R. OF WETLANDS IN REDUCING THEM Kreilling, and M. Morrison THE ISOKINETIC STREAMLINED SUSPENDED Y.C. Agrawal and H.C. Pottsmith SEDIMENT PROFILING LISST-SL – STATUS AND  FIELD RESULTS

Page vii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

FISP’S SUITE OF FEDERALLY APPROVED Broderick Davis SUSPENDED-SEDIMENT / WATER QUALITY  COLLAPSIBLE-BAG SAMPLERS A TIDALLY- AVERAGED SEDIMENT TRANSPORT Megan A. Lionberger, David H. MODEL OF THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY, Schoellhamer, Jon Leatherbarrow,  CALIFORNIA and Kris May A UNIFIED APPROACH FOR RIVER MORPHOLOGY, Chih Ted Yang SEDIMENT TRANSPORT, AND EROSION STUDIES  REGEM: THE REVISED EPHEMERAL GULLY Lee Gordon, Sean Bennett, Fred EROSION MODEL Theurer, Ron Bingner, and Carlos  Alonso SEDIMENT INVESTIGATIONS IN THE VICINITY OF Nina J Reins and Tonja L. Koob THE OLD RIVER COMPLEX, LOUISIANA: RED  RIVER ABOVE OLD RIVER OUTFLOW CHANNEL AN APPARATUS FOR BED MATERIAL SEDIMENT Michael Bliss Singer, Stacy EXTRACTION FROM COARSE RIVER BEDS IN Cepello, and Adam Henderson  LARGE ALLUVIAL RIVERS ANALYZING SEDIMENT YIELDS IN THE CONTEXT Mary Ann Madej, Randy Klein, OF TMDL’S Vicki Ozaki, and Tom Marquette 

TURBIDITY AND SEDIMENT TRACERS

Title Author(s) Paper OVERVIEW OF SELECTED SURROGATE John R. Gray and Jeffrey W. TECHNOLOGIES FOR CONTINUOUS SUSPENDED- Gartner  SEDIMENT MONITORING TURBIDITY SENSORS TRACK SEDIMENT S. M. Dabney, M. A. Locke, and R. CONCENTRATIONS IN RUNOFF FROM W. Steinriede  AGRICULTURAL FIELDS A NEW SENSOR FOR TURBIDITY AND SEDIMENT Stuart Garner ANALYSES IN NATURAL WATERS  IMPACT OF THE ROSEWOOD CREEK Rick Susfalk RESTORATION PROJECT ON SUSPENDED  SEDIMENT LOADING TO LAKE TAHOE: PRE- MONITORING AND YEAR 1

Page viii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

IDENTIFYING SOURCES OF FINE-GRAINED Allen C. Gellis and Jurate M. SUSPENDED-SEDIMENT FOR THE POCOMOKE Landwehr  RIVER, AN EASTERN SHORE TRIBUTARY TO THE CHESAPEAKE BAY THE USE OF TURBIDITY SENSORS IN MONITORING Sandra E. Ryan, Mark K. Dixon, SEDIMENT LOADS FOLLOWING WILDFIRE and Kathleen A. Dwire  TURBIDITY MEASUREMENTS FOR A. P. Stubblefield, J. E. Reuter, E. DETERMINATION OF SEDIMENT SOURCE AND W. Larsen, M. I. Escobar, and C.  RETENTION IN RIVER AND MARSH R. Goldman ENVIRONMENTS

STREAM RESTORATION

Title Author(s) Paper RIVER RESTORATION USING A GEOMORPHIC David L. Rosgen APPROACH FOR NATURAL CHANNEL DESIGN  THE HYDRAULICS OF BENDWAY WEIRS C. I. Thornton, D. C. Baird, S. R. Abt ,and R. S. Padilla  RESEARCH, COORDINATION, AND OPEN-SOURCE Peter R. Wilcock and Gary Parker MODELS TO IMPROVE STREAM RESTORATION  PRACTICE EMPIRICAL AND ANALYTICAL APPROACHES FOR F. Douglas Shields, Jr. and Ronald STREAM CHANNEL DESIGN R. Copeland  RESTORATION OF LOWER LAS VEGAS WASH – Chris Bahner, Gerry A. Hester, UPPER DIVERSION WEIR and Syndi J. Dudley  SIAM,SEDIMENT IMPACT ANALYSIS METHODS, David Mooney FOR EVALUATING SEDIMENTATION CAUSES AND  EFFECTS RIO SALADO (SALT RIVER) HABITAT Dennis L. Richards and Glenn RESTORATION - LOW FLOW CHANNEL DESIGN Mashburn  JUDY’S BRANCH, ILLINOIS REHABILITATION PLAN Chester C. Watson, David S. Biedenharn, and Moosub Eom 

Page ix Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

WATERSHED MODELING

Title Author(s) Paper EVALUATING SEDIMENT PROCESSES, AND Jennifer A. Curtis, Lorraine E. TRANSPORT PROCESSES IN THE UPPER YUBA Flint, Charles N. Alpers, and Scott  RIVER WATERSHED, CALIFORNIA A. Wright EFFECTS OF CLIMATE ON FLOW AND SEDIMENT Lorraine E. Flint, Joel R. Guay, TRANSPORT IN THE UPPER YUBA RIVER BASIN, Alan L. Flint, and Jennifer A. Curtis  NORTHERN SIERRA NEVADA MODELING SYSTEMS FOR SEDIMENT Theresa Possley, Alex Brunton MANAGEMENT AND BMP EVALUATION IN LARGE and Rob Nairn, and Jim Selegean  GREAT LAKES TRIBUTARY WATERSHEDS DEVELOPMENT OF UPPER BOUNDARY Alan L. Flint and Lorraine E. Flint CONDITIONS FOR A WATERSHED MODEL IN THE  UPPER YUBA RIVER BASIN, NORTHERN SIERRA NEVADA WATERSHED SIMULATION WITH AN ENHANCED Yong G. Lai DISTRIBUTED MODEL  ANNAGNPS: ACCOUNTING FOR SNOWPACK, Daniel S. Moore, Fred D. Theurer, SNOWMELT, FREEZING AND SOIL FREEZE-THAW and Ronald L. Bingner  WASH LOAD / BED MATERIAL LOAD CONCEPT IN David S. Biedenharn, Colin R. REGIONAL SEDIMENT MANAGEMENT Thorne, and Chester C. Watson  ONE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING OF INCISION Blair Greimann and Victor Huang THROUGH RESERVOIR DEPOSITS  PREDICTING WATERSHED IMPACTS OF FOREST William J. Elliot FUEL MANAGEMENT WITH WEPP TECHNOLOGY  A GEOMORPHIC EVALUATION, WITH CALIBRATED Thomas Garday HYDRAULIC AND HYDROLOGIC MODELING OF  THE HOP BROOK WATERSHED IN MASSACHUSETTS MULTIPLE APPROACHES TO ASSESSING THE Rob Nairn, Alex Brunton, and Jim IMPACT OF DAMS ON SEDIMENT DELIVERY IN THE Selegean  ST. JOSEPH RIVER WATERSHED, MICHIGAN/ILLINOIS CUMULATIVE WATERSHED EFFECTS ANALYSIS Chris S. Renschler and William J. WITH THE GEOSPATIAL INTERFACE FOR THE Elliot  WATER EROSION PREDICTION PROJECT (GEOWEPP)

Page x Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

SEDIMENT SURROGATES

Title Author(s) Paper DEVELOPMENT OF AN ACOUSTIC SUSPENDED Daniel E. Kleinert, Daniel Wren, SEDIMENT MONITORING SYSTEM Chris Smith, and James  Chambers ESTIMATION OF PARTICLE SIZES FOR A RANGE Christopher K. Smith, Daniel OF NARROW SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS OF NATURAL Wren, and James P. Chambers  SANDS SUSPENDED IN WATER USING MULTI- FREQUENCY ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTER HIGH-RESOLUTION MONITORING OF SUSPENDED- David J. Topping, Theodore S. SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION AND GRAIN SIZE IN Melis, Scott A. Wright, and David  THE COLORADO RIVER IN GRAND CANYON USING M. Rubin LASER-DIFFRACTION INSTRUMENTS AND A THREE-FREQUENCY ACOUSTIC SYSTEM COMPARISON OF SUSPENDED-SEDIMENT LOAD Mark A Uhrich and Heather M ESTIMATES USING A TURBIDITYAND SUSPENDED- Bragg  SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION REGRESSION AND THE GRAPHICAL CONSTITUENT LOADING ANALYSIS SYSTEM (GCLAS) A METHOD FOR COMPARING THE LISST 100 TO Lawrence A. Freeman THE USGS PIPETTE METHOD FOR SUSPENDED  SEDIMENT PARTICLE SIZE ANALYSIS IN THE MARINA SEDIMENT LAB, U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, CALIFORNIA WATER SCIENCE CENTER USE OF AN ADCP TOCOMPUTE SUSPENDED Gary R. Wall, Elizabeth Nystrom, SEDIMENT DISCHARGE IN THE TIDAL HUDSON and Simon Litten  RIVER, NY CALCULATION OF SUSPENDED SEDIMENT AT Jason Kean and Dungan Smith GAGING STATIONS  CROSS-SECTIONAL PROGRESSION OF APPARENT Terry A. Kenney BEDLOAD VELOCITIES  CONTINUOUS IN-STREAM MONITORING TO Andrew C. Ziegler, Victoria G. ESTIMATE WATER-QUALITY CHARACTERISTICS Christensen, and Patrick P.  AND SEDIMENT SOURCES IN THE LITTLE Rasmussen ARKANSAS RIVER, KANSAS REAL-TIME ANALYSIS OF CONCENTRATED Chris Konrad, Chuck Pottsmith, FLUVIAL SUSPENDED SEDIMENTS Ted Melis, and David Rubin 

Page xi Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

PREDICTION OF GRAIN SIZE OF SUSPENDED Roger Kuhnle, Daniel Wren, and SEDIMENT: IMPLICATIONS FOR CALCULATING James P. Chambers  SUSPENDED SEDIMENT CONCENTRATIONS USING SINGLE FREQUENCY ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTER USING ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTER TECHNOLOGY Jon Hortness TO MEASURE SUSPENDED SEDIMENT  CONCENTRATIONS IN IDAHO STREAMS A COMPARISON OF TWO FIELD STUDIES OF David Gaeuman and Colin D. ACOUSTIC BED VELOCITY: GRAIN SIZE AND Rennie  INSTRUMENT FREQUENCY EFFECTS USING HIGH RESOLUTION BATHYMETRIC DATA David D. Abraham and Roger FOR MEASURING BED-LOAD TRANSPORT Kuhnle  PASSIVE ACOUSTIC MONITORING OF COARSE Jonathan Barton, Rudy BEDLOAD TRANSPORT ON THE TRINITY RIVER Slingerland, Thomas B.  Gabrielson, and Smokey Pittman SEDIMENT TRACKING: A COMPLEMENTARY Kevin Black, Sam Athey, and METHOD FOR MEASUREMENT OF SEDIMENT Peter Wilson  TRANSPORT IN RIVERS

DAM REMOVAL / REHABILITATION

Title Author(s) Paper GEOMORPHIC RESPONSE OF RIVERS TO DAM Gordon E. Grant, Gregory Stewart, REMOVAL: NEW INSIGHTS FROM FLUME and Chris Bromley  EXPERIMENTS AND FIELD STUDIES SEDIMENT DYNAMICS POST DAM REMOVAL: Laura Wildman, Cassie Klumpp, STATE OF THE SCIENCE AND PRACTICE Blair Greimann, James  MacBroom, Martin Doyle, Yantao Cui, and Rollin Hotchkiss NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION SERVICE Glen B. Miller WATERSHED REHABILITATION IN OKLAHOMA – A  GEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF CHANNEL Eddy J. Langendoen and Robert ADJUSTMENT OF THE KALAMAZOO RIVER R. Wells  FOLLOWING THE REMOVAL OF TWO LOW-HEAD DAMS BETWEEN OTSEGO AND PLAINWELL, MICHIGAN

Page xii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

GULLY EROSION

Title Author(s) Paper IMPACT OF NON-ERODIBLE LAYER ON Robert R. Wells, Lee Gordon, EPHEMERAL GULLY DEVELOPMENT Sean Bennett, and Carlos Alonso  STUDY OF THE EFFECTS OF LATERAL SEEPAGE Andrew Simon and Robert R. FORCES ON TENSION-CRACK DEVELOPMENT, Wells  BANK-FAILURE DIMENSIONS AND MIGRATION OF EDGE OF FIELD GULLIES EVALUATION OF THE IMPACT OF EPHEMERAL Ronald L. Bingner, Fred Theurer, GULLIES ON SEDIMENT LOADING WITHIN and Jim Stafford  WATERSHEDS USING AGNPS ASSESSING EPHEMERAL GULLY EROSION IN THE Lyle Frees, Jeffery Neel, Kent CHENEY LAKE WATERSHED USING GIS, REGEM McVay, and Daniel Devlin  AND THE ANNAGNPS MODEL TERMINATION OF GULLY PROCESSES, Peter P. Hudec, Frank Simpson, SOUTHEASTERN NIGERIA Enuvie G. Akpokodje, and  Meshach O. Umeneke ASPECTS OF GULLY EROSION RELATED TO Greg Hanson and Darrel Temple EMBANKMENT OVERTOPPING AND BREACH  PIPE FLOW IMPACTS ON EPHEMERAL GULLY G.V. Wilson, R.J. Cullum, and EROSION M.J.M. Romkens  EPHEMERAL GULLY EROSION PROCESS AND Fen-li Zheng, Zhong-shan Jiang, MODELING ON THE LOESS PLATEAU IN CHINA and Min Wu 

RESERVOIR SEDIMENTATION

Title Author(s) Paper COMPARISON OF NUMERICAL MODELS APPLIED Jennifer Bountry, Yong Lai, and TO REMOVAL OF SAVAGE RAPIDS DAM NEAR Timothy Randle  GRANTS PASS, OREGON TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL TRENDS IN SEDIMENT Sean J. Bennett, Fred E. Rhoton, CHEMISTRY IMPOUNDED WITHIN A FLOOD ShuMin Hsu, and Carlos V. Alonso 

Page xiii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

CONTROL RESERVOIR: GRENADA LAKE, MS ACOUSTIC PROFILING OF SEDIMENT Del Leary, Craig J. Hickey and ACCUMULATION IN THREE SMALL EROSION Daniel G. Wren  CONTROL RESERVOIRS IN NORTH MISSISSIPPI SEDIMENTATION IN THREE SMALL EROSION Daniel G. Wren, Robert R. Wells, CONTROL RESERVOIRS IN NORTH MISSISSIPPI Christopher G. Wilson, Charles M.  Cooper, Del Leary, and Craig J. Hickey SEDIMENT CHEMISTRY IN THE COLORADO RIVER Robert J. Hart DELTA, LAKE POWELL, UTAH  EFFECTS OF NON-AGRICULTURAL HUMAN Kyle Juracek and Andrew Ziegler ACTIVITY ON SEDIMENT QUALITY: A  COMPARISON OF TRACE ELEMENT CONCENTRATIONS IN EIGHT SMALL RESERVOIRS SMALL ARTIFICIAL PONDS IN THE UNITED W.H. Renwick, R.O. Sleezer, R.W. STATES: IMPACTS ON SEDIMENTATION AND Buddemeier, and S.V. Smith  CARBON BUDGET MODELING SUSPENDED SEDIMENT AND WATER Annett B. Sullivan, Stewart A. TEMPERATURE IN DETROIT LAKE, OREGON Rounds, Mark A. Uhrich, and  Heather M. Bragg

SEDIMENT & WILDLIFE HABITAT

Title Author(s) Paper ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT CASE STUDIES FOR Mark S. Nemeth and Kristi-Irene RIVER ENGINEERING AND RESTORATION Smith  PROJECTS ON THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE, NEW MEXICO QUANTITATIVE LINKAGES BETWEEN SEDIMENT Matthew R. Cover, Christine L. SUPPLY, STREAMBED FINE SEDIMENT, AND May, William E. Dietrich, and  BENTHIC MACROINVERTEBRATES IN THE Vincent H. Resh KLAMATH MOUNTAINS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA FLOW-SED / POWER-SED – PREDICTION MODELS David L. Rosgen FOR SUSPENDED AND BEDLOAD TRANSPORT 

Page xiv Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

USE OF AERIAL THERMOGRAPHY TO MAP Ashley K. Heckman, Paul J. EMERGENT RIVERINE SANDBARS Kinzel, and Jonathan M. Nelson  MODELING OF SPECIAL HIGH-FLOW RELEASE Mohammed A. Samad and ALONG PLATTE RIVER IN CENTRAL NEBRASKA Timothy J. Randle  THE IMPLICATIONS OF RECENT FLOODPLAIN Paul Tashjian and Tamara EVOLUTION ON WILDLIFE HABITAT WITHIN THE Massong  MIDDLE RIO GRANDE, NM SAFETY AND FISH PASSAGE FOR LOW-HEAD Aaron W. Buesing DAMS 

FARM BILL / CONSERVATION

Title Author(s) Paper ASSESSING EFFECTS OF CONSERVATION AT THE Tom Drewes, Kelsi Bracmort, and WATERSHED SCALE Jerry Bernard  ASSESSING THE NATIONAL EFFECTS OF Robert L. Kellogg, Charles Rewa, CONSERVATION- FOR THE FIRST TIME (CEAP) and Diane Eckles  EVALUATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF CHANNEL Andrew Simon PROCESSES IN CEAP-WATERSHED SUSPENDED  SEDIMENT YIELDS DETERMINATION OF SEDIMENT SOURCES ON THE Christopher Wilson and Roger CEAP BENCHMARK WATERSHEDS Kuhnle 

Page xv Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

INSTRUMENTATION MONITORING

Title Author(s) Paper MONITORING THE EFFECTS OF SEDIMENTATION Patrick S. Obrien, Alan D. Donner, FROM MOUNT ST. HELENS and David S. Biedenharn  MODELING SEDIMENT TRANSPORT DURING Eleanor Griffin, J. Dungan Smith, OVERBANK FLOW IN THE RIO PUERCO, NEW Jason Kean, and Kirk Vincent  MEXICO THE EFFECTS OF ENSO PHASE ON THE E.D.Andrews and Ronald C. OCCURRENCE OF COARSE PARTICLE MOTION IN Antweiler  CALIFORNIA COASTAL STREAMS THE VALUE OF CONTINUOUS TURBIDITY Teresa J. Rasmussen, Andrew C. MONITORING IN TMDL PROGRAMS Ziegler, Patrick P. Rasmussen,  and Thomas C. Stiles

POSTERS PRESENTATIONS AND COMPUTER DEMONSTRATIONS Title Author(s) Paper PRIMARY FACTORS AFFECTING WATER CLARITY Julie M. Baldizar and Nacy B. AT SHALLOW WATER SITES THROUGHOUT THE Rybicki  CHESAPEAKE AND MARYLAND COASTAL BAYS EQUATIONS FOR ESTIMATING BANKFULL- Gardner C. Bent CHANNEL GEOMETRY AND DISCHARGE FOR  STREAMS IN THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES MULTI-DISCIPLINED APPROACH ON THE UPPER Jennifer Bountry, Lucy Piety, Ed QUINAULT RIVER GEOMORPHIC STUDY, 18 KM Lyon, Tim Randle, Tim Abbe,  REACH UPSTREAM OF LAKE QUINAULT Galen Ward, Kevin Fetherston, Bill Armstrong, Larry Gilbertson, and Chase Barton EAST CHICAGO SEDIMENT REMEDIATION David F. Bucaro and Kirsten DEMONSTRATION PROJECT Buczak  COMPARISON BETWEEN CONCEPTUAL PHYSICAL Omid Reza Safiyary and Amin MODEL OF RESERVOIR SEDIMENTATION AND A Chegenizadeh  3D NUMERICAL MODEL

Page xvi Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

EFFECTS OF THE 1997 FLOOD ON THE KLAMATH Juan de la Fuente, Don Elder, and NATIONAL FOREST, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA: Alisha Miller  LESSONS LEARNED & IMPLICATIONS TO FUTURE FOREST MANAGEMENT TURBIDITY THRESHOLD SAMPLING: Rand Eads and Jack Lewis INSTRUMENTATION AND METHODS  THE CHALLENGES OF SAMPLING SUSPENDED Rand Eads SEDIMENT IN A MOBILE CHANNEL WITH HIGHLY  DYNAMIC TRANSPORT PRELIMINARY SEDIMENT BUDGETS FOR FOUR Sean Eagan, Carolyn Hunaker, WATERSHEDS AT KINGS RIVER EXPERIMENTAL Abbey Korte, Sarah Martin, and  WATERSHED IN SOUTHERN SIERRA NEVADA Lee McDonald RECONNAISSANCE TECHNIQUE FOR RESERVOIR Ron Ferrari and Kent Collins SURVEYS  ALLUVIAL FAN EROSION AND SEDIMENT Joe Gasperi and John McClung INVESTIGATIONS USING THE HYDRAULIC  MODELING TOOL FLO-2D INTEGRATED RIVER MORPHOLOGY AND Blair Greimann, Jennifer Bountry, VEGETATION MODELING OF THE SACRAMENTO Yong Lai, David Mooney, and  RIVER Timothy Randle LOGARITHMIC MATCHING AND ITS APPLICATIONS Junke Guo IN DATA ANALYSIS  SELF-SIMILARITY OF OPEN-CHANNEL Junke Guo TURBULENCE  SOIL EROSION ON CROPLAND IN THE UNITED Carla A. Kertis and Thomas A. STATES: STATUS AND TRENDS FOR 1982-2003 Iivari  U.S.GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PILOT STUDY Natalie Latysh RESULTS FOR PARTICLE SIZE DISTRIBUTION  ANALYSES OF QUALITY ASSURANCE SAMPLES A FIVE-YEAR RECORD OF SEDIMENTATION IN THE Alexis Lavine, Gregory A. LOS ALAMOS RESERVOIR, NEW MEXICO, Kuyumjian, Steven L. Reneau,  FOLLOWING THE CERRO GRANDE FIRE Danny Katzman, and Daniel V. Malmon EVALUATION OF TECHNIQUES TO ESTIMATE Casey J. Lee, Patrick P. SUSPENDED-SEDIMENT CONCENTRATIONS IN Rasmussen, and Andrew C.  THE KANSAS RIVER Ziegler CHANNEL WIDTHS CHANGES ALONG THE MIDDLE Paula Makar, Tamara Massong, RIO GRANDE, NM and Travis Bauer  LANDSLIDE SEDIMENT PRODUCTION RATES IN Juan de la Fuente, Alisha Miller, THE MIDDLE FORK AND UPPER MAIN EEL RIVER Don Elder, Robert Faust, and  BASINS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA William Snavely SPATIAL PATTERNS OF SOIL EROSION AND M.A.Nearing, Akitsu Kimotol,Mary DEPOSITION IN TWO SMALL, SEMI-ARID H. Nichols, and Jerry C. Ritchie  WATERSHEDS GEOMORPHIC CHANGE AND CONTROLLING M.H. Nichols, M. Nearing, and B. VARIABLES IN AN EPHEMERAL ALLUVIAL Yuill  CHANNEL MONITORING COARSE SEDIMENT PARTICLE Mary Nichols DISPLACEMENT USING A RADIO FREQUENCY  IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM MONITORING AGGRADATIONAL AND Robert Padilla and Christi Young DEGRADATIONAL TRENDS OF THE MIDDLE RIO  GRANDE, NM

Page xvii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

NUMERICAL STUDY OF THE RESPONSE OF A Allesandro Cantelli, Miguel Wong, RESERVOIR DEPOSIT TO SUDDEN DAM REMOVAL and Gary Parker  THE USDA’S CONSERVATION EFFECTS Roberta Parry ASSESSMENT PROJECT (CEAP)  LOWER CLEAR CREEK FLOODPLAIN Smokey Pittman, Graham REHABILITIATION PROJECT: GEOMORPHIC Matthews  MONITORING OF PHASE 3A ANALYSIS OF MARINE SEDIMENTS FROM OFF THE L.J. Poppe, S.J. Williams, and V.F. U.S.COAST: METHODOLOGY AND DATA ON DVD Paskevich  IDENTIFICATION OF SEDIMENT SOURCES IN A Fred Rhoton, William Emmerich, SEMIARID WATERSHED USING MULTIPLE Mark Nearing, Jerry Ritchie,  DIAGNOSTIC PROPERTIES Christopher Wilson, and David DiCarlo INFLUENCES OF OFF-HIGHWAY VEHICLES ON Mark S. Riedel FLUVIAL SEDIMENT REGIMES  USDA-NRCS STREAM RESTORATION DESIGN Kerry M. Robinson, Jon Fripp, and HANDBOOK Jerry Bernard  DESIGNING LOG EROSION BARRIERS FOR Larry J. Schmidt MAXIMUM EFFECTIVENESS: THE CONTOUR-LOG-  BASIN APPROACH USE OF WET SIEVING TO IMPROVE THE Bill Selbig, Roger Bannerman, and ACCURACY OF SEDIMENT AND SEDIMENT- George Bowman  ASSOCIATED CONSTITUENT CONCENTRATIONS IN WHOLE-WATER SAMPLES A MODEL OF STREAMBANK STABILITY Andrew Simon and Natasha INCORPORATING HYDRAULIC EROSION AND THE Pollen  EFFECTS OF RIPARIAN VEGETATION USE OF DIMENSIONLESS RATIOS IN STREAM W. Barry Southerland RESTORATION PLANNING  A MULTIDIMENSIONAL MARKER-IN-CELL Robert E. Thomas and Jim Best HYDRAULIC AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MODEL  FOR BRAIDED RIVER FLOW RESULTS OF A TWO-DIMENSIONAL Chad R. Wagner HYDRODYNAMIC AND SEDIMENT-TRANSPORT  MODEL OF THE CONSTRUCTION AND OPERATION OF THE OLMSTED LOCKS AND DAM, OHIO RIVER DETERMINING RELATIVE CONTRIBUTIONS OF Christopher Wilson and Roger ERODED LANDSCAPE SEDIMENT AND BANK Kuhnle  SEDIMENT TO THE SUSPENDED LOAD OF GOODWIN CREEK USING RADIONUCLIDES MEASUREMENTS OF VELOCITY PROFILES AND Scott A. Wright & Jeffrey W. SUSPENDED- SEDIMENT CONCENTRATIONS IN A Gartner  COLORADO RIVER EDDY DURING HIGH FLOW SEDIMENT ANALYSIS OF A GRADUAL DAM Timothy D. Straub, Donald P. REMOVAL ON BREWSTER CREEK NEAR ST. Roseboom, Gary P. Johnson,  CHARLES, ILLINOIS Robert R. Holmes, Jr., Chester C. Watson, and Dave Schrader

Page xviii Go To Table of Contents Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference, April 2–6, 2006, Reno, Nevada, USA

Page xix Go To Table of Contents