Although fundamentally governed by
well-known physics, sediment transport systems quickly become non-linear and statistical
in nature. As a result, the pursuit of the governing dynamics of sediment transport is constrained
to the improved understanding of somewhat dissimilar regimes of staistical behavior, highly dependent upon
small variations in a number of environmental variables.
The ongoing study of sediment transport is mainly driven by the
desire to control the erosion and deposition of significant amounts of sediment that impacts
biologically sensitive environments (e.g. downstream ecosystems), man-made structures (e.g.
coastal development, naval ports and channels, mountain-side buildings, construction sites), and
agricultural areas (e.g. soil loss and aggregation). Field measurements of sediment transport are either
difficult or insufficient to adequately resolve theoretical arguments that, in many cases,
are based on specialized laboratory conditions. Theoretical efforts via computational simulation
are contiuously improving - increased processor speeds, memory availability, and interconectivity
have enabled models of higher acuity than was possible just 5 to 10 years ago. Incorporating higher-order
refinements such as grains size dependence, are now within our grasp.
Although laboratory and field measurement technology, necessary for theory validation,
continues to lag theoretical advancements,
exciting new ideas of study have migrated from the "wishlists" of scientists to that of
possibility and realization with the hopes that
someday, field measurement capability will catch up and/or a critical mass of sufficiently accurate theoretical
models will coallasce into a framework that consistently predicts
available field data over a wide range of environmental conditions.
Related Articles
Cahow, K. 2007. (Non-peer reviewed). A Creek Runs Through It, In: Appalachian Explorations - Research and Creative Endeavors at Appalachian State University, Vol. 3(1): 5-9.
Treadwell, S. 2006. What's going into Kraut Creek? High Country Press, Boone, NC. March 16, 2006.
Mountain Times. March 16, 2006. Watauga Water Watchers, Mountain Times, POB 1815 Boone, NC. March 16, 2006.
Recent Publications
Jones, A.F. and C.S. Thaxton. 2008. Integrated Nearshore Wave Amplitude Model for Use on Portable Devices, IEEE SouthestCON 2008, Peer-reviewed conference proceedings, IEEE, Hutnsville, AL.
Thaxton, C.S., C.M. Babyak, W. Anderson. J. L. Anderson, W.P. Benner III, J.A. Davis, and C.A. Penders. 2007. Baseline monitoring case study of a high-gradient, urbanized stream - Boone Creek, Boone, NC, 2007 Low Impact Development Conference Proceedings, ASCE. (peer-reviewed - American Society of Civil Engineers, March, 2007)
Calantoni, J., and C. S. Thaxton (2008), Simple power law for transport ratio with bimodal distributions of coarse sediments under waves, J. Geophys. Res., 113, C03003, doi:10.1029/2007JC004237.
Thaxton, C.S., W.P. Anderson, C.M. Babyak. 2007 - Non-peer reviewed. Baseline monitoring, analysis, and modeling of the Boone Creek watershed, Final Report
for the University Research Council Competitive Grants program, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC
Thaxton, C.S. and R.A. McLaughlin, 2005. Sediment Capture Effectiveness of Various Baffle Types in a Sediment Retention Pond, Trans. of the ASAE, 48(5): 1795-1802
Thaxton, C.S., Calantoni, J., McLaughlin, R.A. 2004. Hydrodynamic Assessment of Various Types of Baffles in a Sediment Detention Pond, Trans. of the ASAE, 47(3): 741-749
Recent Conference Proceedings
A universal method for setting up field problems in intermediate and advanced classical mechanics and electromagnetism. 2007. North Carolina Section of the American Association of Physics Teachers, High Point University, High Point, NC, October 20, 2007.
Thaxton, C.S., C. Penders, W. Anderson, J. Anderson, C. Babyak, W. Benner, III. 2007. Impacts of Urbanization on Headwater Streams of the New River: How Do We Bring Back the Trout?. 2007 New River Symposium, New River Biota II, May 31 - June 2, 2007, Radford University, Radford, VA.
Thaxton, C.S., C.M. Babyak, W. Anderson. J. L. Anderson, W.P. Benner III, J.A. Davis, and C.A. Penders. 2007. Baseline monitoring case study of a high-gradient, urbanized stream - Boone Creek, Boone, NC, 2007 Low Impact Development Conference Proceedings, ASCE. (peer-reviewed - American Society of Civil Engineers, March, 2007)
Anderson, J.L., W.P. Anderson, Jr., C.S. Thaxton, and C.M. Babyak. 2007. Dynamics of episodic temperature variations in an urbanized, high-gradient stream. Paper No. 9-1 in Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 39(2), p. 17. GSA Southeast Section Meeting, Savannah, GA.
Thaxton, C.S. 2006. Path sampling Monte Carlo method for watershed-scale terrain evolution in GRASS GIS. Invited lecture, Naval Research Laboratory, Stennis Space Center, MS. May 14, 2006.
Thaxton, C.S. & J. Calantoni. 2006. Vertical sorting and preferrential transport in sheet flow with bimodal size distributions of sediment, Coastal Engineering, 2006: Proceedings of the 30th International Conference on Coastal Engineering (ICCE 2006) 3-8 September, Ed. Jane McKee Smith, World Scientific Publishing, Hackensack, NJ. Vol. 3, pp. 3056-3065.
Penders, C., W. Benner, J. Anderson, C. Thaxton, C. Babyak, W. Anderson. 2006. Case Study: Boone Creek Monitoring Project - Boone, NC, State of North Carolina Undergraduate Research and Creativity Symposium, November 18, 2006, Raleigh, NC.
Thaxton, C.S. and J. Calantoni. 2006. Simple Power Law for Transport Ratio with Bimodal Distribution of Coarse Sediment, N8.00006, 2006 American Physical Society March Meeting, Baltimore, MD
Mitasova, H., C. Thaxton, J. Hofierka, R. McLaughlin, A. Moore, L. Mitas. 2005. Path sampling method for modeling overland water flow, sediment transport, and short term terrain evolution in Open Source GIS. In: C.T. Miller, M.W. Farthing, V.G. Gray, G.F. Pinder eds., Proceedings of the XVth International Conference on Computational Methods in Water Resources (CMWR-XV), June 13-17, 2004, Chapel Hill, NC, USA, Elsevier, pp. 1479-1490.
Thaxton, C.S. and R.A. McLaughlin. 2004. Hydrodynamic and Sediment Capture Assessment of Various Baffles in a Sediment Retention Pond, 2004 International Erosion Control Association (IECA), Charlotte, NC.
McLaughlin, R.A. and Thaxton, C.S. 2004. Optimal Hydraulic Permeability of Composite Geotextiles as Baffles in a Sedimentation Basin, Paper number 042233, 2004 ASAE/CSAE Annual International Meeting, Ottawa, ON, Canada
Thaxton, C.S., H. Mitasova, L. Mitas, R.McLaughlin. 2004. Simulations of distributed watershed evolution, deposition, and terrain evolution using a path sampling Monte Carlo method, paper number 042101, 2004 ASAE Annual Meeting, Ottawa, ON, Canada
Thaxton, C.S. 2004. Path Sampling Monte Carlo Method for Modeling Sediment Transport Processes Over Complex Terrain. 2004. N.C. Sectional Meeting of the American Association of Physics Teachers, Meredith College, Raleigh, NC, 2004.
Thaxton, C.S. and R.A. McLaughlin. 2003.Hydrodynamic Assessment of Various Types of Baffles in a Sediment Detention Pond, in Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Environmental Regulations-II. Proceedings of the 8-12 November 2003 Conference (Albuquerque, NM, USA), pp. 557-557.
Thaxton, C.S., J. Calantoni, and T.G. Drake. 2001. Can a single grain size represent bedload transport in the surf zone?" EOS Trans. AGU, 82(47), Fall Meeting Supplement, F587 (Special session in honor of Dr. Thomas Kinder), AGU