#1 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2002, 06:36 PM
david.hansen
Member
 
Posts: n/a
Manning's n ref's, caveats

All

There is also a more recent USGS WS paper on this interesting subject.
I have pasted the following from a one-pg handout that I give out in my
CIVL6159 'Form and Process in Alluvial Channels' course (I had 35 mm
slides made of all the colour photos in both documents; and when we are
feeling tired of number crunching in CIVL6159 we kick back in a dark
room and discuss them):

1. Barnes H.H. 1967. Roughness characteristics of natural channels.
USGS Water Supply Paper #1849, US Govt printing Office, Wash. DC, 213 p.

50 stations, data collected over 15 years. n from 0.024 to 0.097.

Sites presented:

no pure sand-bed channels.

hydrometric station present in each reach.

Qhigh from vel.-area method (measurement) or use of reliable stage-Q
curve with clear high-water marks from the event(s).

relatively uniform reaches.

all flows were in-bank flows save one, no significant floodplain
flows.

bed-material was sampled later (years after the event(s)).

each reach consisted of 2 to 17 cross-sections.

n computed using a method "virtually the same as" the slope-area
method.

for some sites more than one Qhigh was investigated (larger one
described first).

2. Arcement G.J. and Schneider V.R. 1989. Guide for selecting
Manning's n roughness coefficients for natural channels with flood
plains. USGS Water Supply Paper #2339, USGS, Denver CO, 38 p.

this article emphasizes densely-vegetated floodplains. n from 0.10
to 0.20.

Aldridge and Garrett (1973) had previously presented a rationale for
determining n based on:


nb = base value of n,
n1 = surface irregularity roughness component,
n2 = channel irregularity roughness component (prismaticity),
n3 = roughness component to explain obstructions,
n4 = roughness component to explain the effect of vegetation,
m = related to sinuosity.

Arcement and Schneider modify the Aldridge-Garrett system for
floodplains


nb = base value of n,
n1 = surface irregularity roughness component,
n3 = roughness component to explain obstructions,
n4 = roughness component to explain the effect of vegetation.

and present detailed flow-charts and tables for systematically
determining the appropriate n for a floodplain. The vegetative
component was studied in great detail by measuring the total stem area
of plants/trees in the flood plains. Depths were a few ft.

On the subject of hydraulic resistance, I like the paper:
3. Bray D. and Davar K. 1987. Resistance to Flow in Gravel-bed Rivers.
Can J of Civil Engineering, 14(1):77-86.

David
Halifax, NS
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 12-17-2002, 06:37 PM
f.pappenberger
Member
 
Posts: n/a
Re: Manning's n ref's, caveats

Just in case you did not see it:

>2. Arcement G.J. and Schneider V.R. 1989. Guide for selecting
Manning's n roughness coefficients for natural channels with flood
plains. USGS Water Supply Paper #2339, USGS, Denver CO, 38 p.
As the 1 reference is this article is available online as well under
www.fhwa.dot.gov/bridge/wsp2339.pdf.

Florian pappenberger
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are Off
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


All times are GMT. The time now is 04:08 PM.