Origin and Transport of Sediments in a Semi-Arid Environment
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
Sediment transport in fluvial systems is governed by complex, non-linear interactions
between water discharge and suspended-sediment concentration, giving rise to hysteresis loops that
standard rating curves cannot capture. This thesis introduces an integrated, automated workflow
for concentration–discharge hysteresis analysis. We develop the concept of a “hysteresis
signature,” a systematic code that partitions each loop into linear, clockwise, and anticlockwise
segments. We then quantify each segment both on a normalized scale (partial amplitudes) and in
real discharge–concentration units via an asynchronous-load metric.
Applied to a large multi-parameter dataset, our method automatically classified 51 distinct
hysteresis forms—far beyond traditional five-type schemes—and resolved classification
ambiguities inherent in existing indices. This approach provides a powerful tool for understanding
watershed dynamics in terms of sediment production and for identifying sediment sources at the
catchment scale. In a semi-arid case study on the Mekerra River (NW Algeria), we validated the
workflow against successive flood events and found that bank-and-bed sources contribute roughly
84 % of total suspended sediment yield.
The modular nature of the tool makes it readily adaptable to various climates and different
watershed sizes, from large basins to small ones. The hysteresis signature method can also be
applied to dissolved loads. The tool offers a robust, scalable approach for high-frequency
monitoring, sediment-source apportionment, and watershed management.