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Featured researches published by Alberto Canestrelli.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2015

Dynamics of River Mouth Deposits

Sergio Fagherazzi; Douglas A. Edmonds; William Nardin; Nicoletta Leonardi; Alberto Canestrelli; Federico Falcini; Douglas J. Jerolmack; Giulio Mariotti; Joel C. Rowland; Rudy Slingerland

Bars and subaqueous levees often form at river mouths due to high sediment availability. Once these deposits emerge and develop into islands, they become important elements of the coastal landscape, hosting rich ecosystems. Sea level rise and sediment starvation are jeopardizing these landforms, motivating a thorough analysis of the mechanisms responsible for their formation and evolution. Here we present recent studies on the dynamics of mouth bars and subaqueous levees. The review encompasses both hydrodynamic and morphological results. We first analyze the hydrodynamics of the water jet exiting a river mouth. We then show how this dynamics coupled to sediment transport leads to the formation of mouth bars and levees. Specifically, we discuss the role of sediment eddy diffusivity and potential vorticity on sediment redistribution and related deposits. The effect of waves, tides, sediment characteristics, and vegetation on river mouth deposits is included in our analysis, thus accounting for the inherent complexity of the coastal environment where these landforms are common. Based on the results presented herein, we discuss in detail how river mouth deposits can be used to build new land or restore deltaic shorelines threatened by erosion.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Where river and tide meet: The morphodynamic equilibrium of alluvial estuaries

Michele Bolla Pittaluga; N. Tambroni; Alberto Canestrelli; Rudy Slingerland; Stefano Lanzoni; Giovanni Seminara

We investigate the morphodynamic equilibrium of tidally dominated alluvial estuaries, extending previous works concerning the purely tidal case and the combined tidal-fluvial case with a small tidal forcing. We relax the latter assumption and seek the equilibrium bed profile of the estuary, for a given planform configuration with various degrees of funneling, solving numerically the 1-D governing equation. The results show that with steady fluvial and tidal forcings, an equilibrium bed profile of estuaries exists. In the case of constant width estuaries, a concave down equilibrium profile develops through most of the estuary. Increasing the amplitude of the tidal oscillation, progressively higher bed slopes are experienced at the mouth while the river-dominated portion of the estuary experiences an increasing bed degradation. The fluvial-marine transition is identified by a “tidal length” that increases monotonically as the river discharge and the corresponding sediment supply are increased while the river attains a new morphological equilibrium configuration. Tidal length also increases if, for a fixed river discharge and tidal amplitude, the sediment flux is progressively reduced with respect to the transport capacity. In the case of funnel-shaped estuaries the tidal length strongly decreases, aggradation is triggered by channel widening, and tidal effects are such to enhance the slope at the inlet and the net degradation of the river bed. Finally, results suggest that alluvial estuaries in morphological equilibrium cannot experience any amplification of the tidal wave propagating landward. Hence, hypersynchronous alluvial estuaries cannot be in equilibrium.


Journal of Applied Water Engineering and Research | 2015

Finite volume modelling of a stratified flow with the presence of submerged weirs

Manuel Bogoni; Alberto Canestrelli; Stefano Lanzoni

The saltwater intrusion in the estuary of the Adige River has been investigated by a two-dimensional finite volume shock-capturing model. Owing to the relative small tide range characterizing the river mouth, a sharply stratified salt wedge tends to form during low discharge periods (e.g. in summer). Suitable hydraulic relations have been introduced to model the action of a submerged barrage, located close to the estuary mouth and built to hinder seawater intrusion. Field measurements of salinity profiles have been used to calibrate the model. The numerical results suggest that, as a consequence of increased water withdrawal that occurred in the last years, the barrage does not prevent efficiently the intrusion of the salt wedge any more.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Effect of tides on mouth bar morphology and hydrodynamics

Nicoletta Leonardi; Alberto Canestrelli; Tao Sun; Sergio Fagherazzi


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Importance of frictional effects and jet instability on the morphodynamics of river mouth bars and levees

Alberto Canestrelli; William Nardin; Douglas A. Edmonds; Sergio Fagherazzi; Rudy Slingerland


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Tidal hydrodynamics and erosional power in the Fly River delta, Papua New Guinea

Alberto Canestrelli; Sergio Fagherazzi; Andrea Defina; Stefano Lanzoni


Sedimentary Geology | 2014

One-dimensional numerical modeling of the long-term morphodynamic evolution of a tidally-dominated estuary: The Lower Fly River (Papua New Guinea)

Alberto Canestrelli; Stefano Lanzoni; Sergio Fagherazzi


Advances in Water Resources | 2012

A mass-conservative centered finite volume model for solving two-dimensional two-layer shallow water equations for fluid mud propagation over varying topography and dry areas

Alberto Canestrelli; Sergio Fagherazzi; Stefano Lanzoni


Advances in Water Resources | 2012

Restoration of the contact surface in FORCE-type centred schemes II: Non-conservative one- and two-layer two-dimensional shallow water equations

Alberto Canestrelli; Eleuterio F. Toro


International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids | 2016

A mass‐conservative staggered immersed boundary model for solving the shallow water equations on complex geometries

Alberto Canestrelli; Aukje Spruyt; Bert Jagers; Rudy Slingerland; Mart Borsboom

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Rudy Slingerland

Pennsylvania State University

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Douglas A. Edmonds

Indiana University Bloomington

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Federico Falcini

University of Pennsylvania

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