Not applicable.
Not applicable.
(1) Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the field of building up land in water-covered or water-surrounded areas and more specifically to the field of restoring land in coastal wetlands where erosion has caused land loss. This invention also relates to the field of building land bodies in water-covered or water-surrounded areas.
(2) Description of the Related Art
Coastal wetlands historically have been rich in plant and animal life. This abundance of plant and animal life has made coastal wetlands productive areas for fishing (for fish and shellfish), trapping, and hunting.
Coastal wetlands require a constant supply of sediment so that the process of sedimentation keeps pace with erosion. In a coastal wetland, the land is built up by sedimentation and broken down by erosion. In a stable coastal wetland, these processes are in balance when considered over the long term: land loss through erosion and land gain from sedimentation remain essentially equal. Seasonal or unusual events such as floods or storms may cause erosion and sedimentation to become unbalanced for a time. But in a stable wetland, erosion and sedimentation remain in balance over the long term.
Over at least the last 100 years, human activities have affected the natural balance between erosion and sedimentation in many coastal wetlands. Levees and other developments have reduced the flow of fresh water into many coastal wetlands. These developments have reduced the amount of sedimentation in the affected coastal wetlands by eliminating the sediment flows that were carried by the fresh water flow.
In addition to reducing sedimentation, the reduction of fresh water flow has also promoted erosion. The reduction of fresh water flow has changed the chemical composition—especially the salinity—of water in some coastal wetlands. Plants adapted to the previous (lower) salinity levels often die when salinity increases. Killing the plants increases erosion because many plants hold the land together and help to absorb impacts of waves and other water flows. When the plants die, erosion increases.
With erosion increasing and sedimentation decreasing, land area in coastal wetlands has shrunk. Facing the loss of a valuable resource, public officials and citizens have sought ways to reduce erosion and increase sedimentation in coastal wetlands so that lost land may be restored. Fresh water diversion from rivers into coastal wetlands merely keeps salt water at bay and does little to promote land restoration, not only because of decreased sediment in leveed rivers but also because diversion of fresh water typically uses siphons or pipes that place sediment-containing water into a single location rather than over a broader plain. Rivers currently contain seventy percent less sediment than they did fifty years ago because of flood-prevention methods upstream.
Applicant's U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/695,640 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/349,599, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,827,525 B2, disclose devices, systems, and methods for restoring wetlands and building up land using a cutterhead dredge and other devices.
It is an object of this invention to provide a method and system for building up land in a water-covered area. It is another object of this invention to provide a structure capable of confining sediment. It is another object of this invention to provide a structure capable of protecting land against impacts of waves and other water movement. To achieve these and other advantages and objects, and in accordance with the purpose of the invention as embodied and broadly described herein, in one aspect the inventor describes a system method for building up land in a water-covered area and a system and method for protecting land against impacts of waves and other water movement.
In a first embodiment, the method includes the steps of: supplying a floating structure having an essentially closed shape and capable of confining sediment; selecting a location in which land is to be built up; placing the floating structure at the location; and introducing a sediment-containing water flow into the interior of the essentially closed shape. In a second embodiment of the method, the steps remain substantially the same, but the floating structure is of a different configuration, with the floating structure comprising a pair of spaced and essentially parallel bodies defining the area in which sediment is to be confined.
Further in accordance with the purpose of the invention as embodied and broadly described herein, in another aspect, the inventor describes an embodiment of a system for building up land in a water-covered area. The system includes a plurality of floating boom segments, a wasteweir segment, and a sediment source. The boom segments and the wasteweir segment are connectable to form a shape that encloses an area wherein land is to be built up. The boom segments are connectable by connecting means as described further below. Each boom segment has a body that has a sieve panel attached thereto. Thus the assembled device includes an essentially closed shape formed by the boom segments and interrupted by the wasteweir segment. The assembled device also includes an essentially closed shape extending essentially between the water surface and the water bottom and interrupted by the wasteweir segment. The wasteweir segment enhances the rate of land formation by increasing the rate at which water from the sediment source may leave the enclosed area. Other embodiments of the invention may include multiple wasteweir segments or may omit wasteweir segments entirely. The wasteweir segment may be removed when the desired land body has been formed.
In the first embodiment of a system for building up land in a water-covered area, each boom segment has a floatable body having a first end portion, a second end portion, and a lower side portion; a first means for connecting the body attached to the first end portion and a second means for connecting the body attached to the second end portion; and a sieve panel attached to the lower side portion. The floating body is formed from buoyant material and may be formed in any convenient fashion allowing attachment of the sieve panel and the means for connecting the body. In the first embodiment, the floatable body is preferably made from a buoyant foam material. The foam material is preferably sealed within a skin of vinyl cloth. The skin is preferably equipped with grommeted holes for attaching means for connecting the body.
In the first embodiment, the sieve panel of each boom segment is preferably heat-bonded to the vinyl skin of the floatable body. The sieve panel of each boom segment has a generally rectangular shape and an upper portion, a lower portion, and first and second side portions, the first and second side portions of the sieve panel being respectively aligned with the first and second end portions of the body. Each first side portion of the sieve panel has disposed thereon a first means for connecting sieve panel; likewise, each second side portion of the sieve panel has disposed thereon second means for attaching sieve panel. In the first embodiment the means for connecting sieve panels are two connectible portions of a zipper. Other means, including ropes, cords, snaps, interlocking rigid connectors, and heat bonding, may also be used as sieve-panel connecting means. Each sieve panel has a height greater than or approximately equal to the depth of the water in the water-covered area and preferably has a height approximately twice the depth of the water in the water-covered area in order to create a terracing effect around the perimeter and to thereby mimic a naturally-sloped shoreline. Here the height of a sieve panel is the distance between its upper portion and its lower portion, measured with the sieve panel laid out upon a flat surface. When the sieve panel has a height greater than the depth of the water in which the sieve panel is used, the fact that the height of the sieve panel itself is greater than the water depth allows the sieve to bulge outward in a curved shape; for example, see
In a preferred embodiment, the mesh of the sieve panel is approximately 1/16 inch. This allows for vegetation to take root and be anchored to the sieve panel. In some embodiments, the mesh of the sieve panel may be a biodegradable mesh material.
Optionally, each sieve panel has an anchor segment attached to and preferably running the length of its lower portion, the anchor segment being a segment of lead-core line, chain, or other similar dense, non-floating, generally linear material. The anchor segment helps to hold the lower portion of the sieve panel to the bottom of the water-covered area. Each boom segment has an anchor segment having a first end portion aligned with the first end portion of the floatable body and a second end portion aligned with the second end portion of the floatable body. Each anchor segment has first anchor connecting means disposed upon the first end portion thereof and second anchor connecting means disposed upon the second end portion thereof.
Optionally, each boom segment can also include a tiedown having a first end portion and a second end portion, the first end portion being attached to the body. The tiedown is secured so that its length under tension is approximately equal to the depth of the water and the length of the tiedown is at least approximately equal to the depth of the water. Preferably, the tiedown is fastened to the anchor line such that its length approximately equals the depth of the water. Tiedowns are intended to add strength to the boom segments and to keep the boom segments at the height of the wasteweir.
In the first embodiment the wasteweir segment is an essentially U-shaped frame having a height at least approximately equal to the depth of the water in the water-covered area. The frame is constructed so that it is denser than water. Aluminum, steel, or other appropriate materials can be used for the frame material. The wasteweir segment includes a first wasteweir-to-body connecting means allowing it to be connected to the second body-connecting means and a second wasteweir-to-body connecting means allowing it to be connected to the first body-connecting means. The wasteweir segment also includes means for connecting it to the first and second sieve-panel attaching means. The wasteweir segment also includes wasteweir-to-anchor connecting means disposed thereon to allow for connection to the anchor segments of boom segments adjacent to the wasteweir segment. By use of its various connecting means, the wasteweir segment may be inserted and connected as part of an assembly of boom segments. The wasteweir segment also includes barriers, which in the first embodiment are preferably ordinary wooden boards. The barriers are connectible to the wasteweir frame via barrier receiving means, which are grooves in the wasteweir frame as in the second embodiment.
The first embodiment also has a sediment source disposed so as to provide sediment flow into the interior of the closed shape formed by the boom segments and the wasteweir segment. The sediment source in the first embodiment is preferably the discharge of a dredge.
In an alternative embodiment, the wasteweir segment may comprise a pair of barrier-support posts, which are elongated elements of sufficient strength and stiffness to be driven into the water bottom in the water-covered area. The barrier-support posts are equipped with barrier receiving means, which may be grooves or any other suitable means for receiving barriers. See
In an alternative embodiment, the sieve panel of each boom segment does not have an anchor line attached thereto. Instead, one or more non-floating objects may be attached to one or more boom segments. For example, a single anchor line of the desired length may be attached to the sieve panels, to the tiedowns of each segment, and to the wasteweir segment, thus running the length of the device. In the embodiments described above, the essentially closed shape may preferably be about 900 to 1000 feet in circumference; and the embodiment may preferably be employed in water with a depth less than about 4 feet, although the use of the embodiment is not limited to that depth.
In another embodiment, the device may comprise parallel sets of floatable bodies disposed opposite one another, with a wasteweir segment at each end of each set of floatable bodies. In this embodiment, the parallel sets of floatable bodies are attached to opposite edges of a shared sieve panel. Note that each floatable body may comprise multiple segments linked together as described elsewhere herein, although this discussion focuses on an embodiment in which each floatable body is a single item rather than a combination of shorter floatable bodies. The shared sieve panel is preferably heat-bonded to the vinyl skin of the floatable body and may be made from the same meshes that are discussed herein or in the material incorporated by reference. The shared sieve panel has a generally rectangular shape and an upper portion, a lower portion, and first and second side portions, the first and second side portions of the sieve panel being respectively aligned with the first and second end portions of the floatable bodies. Each first side portion of the sieve panel has disposed thereon a first means for connecting sieve panel; likewise, each second side portion of the sieve panel has disposed thereon second means for attaching sieve panel. The means for connecting sieve panels may be two connectible portions of a zipper. Other means, including ropes, cords, snaps, interlocking rigid connectors, and heat bonding, may also be used as sieve-panel connecting means. Each sieve panel preferably has a height greater than two times the depth of the water in the water-covered area and preferably has a height approximately equal to the sum of (a) twice the depth of the water in the water-covered area, plus (b) the dimension of the land to be built up, as measured perpendicular to the floatable bodies. Here the height of a sieve panel is the distance between its upper portion and its lower portion, measured with the sieve panel laid out upon a flat surface. This embodiment preferably has, at each end of the floatable boom segments, a wasteweir segment connectible to the boom segments and sieve panel by the same means described above. Preferably the result of assembling this embodiment is one or more roughly rectangular structures for containing sediment as shown in the drawing
In alternative embodiments of the sediment-containment structures described herein, an optional support frame may be used. The support frame or ribbed skeleton is fixed to the sieve panel or shared sieve panel of a sediment-containment structure for the purpose of giving the structure additional stiffness and a defined shape. Embodiments of the support frame may be used in conjunction with the upper and lower portion of a sieve panel as shown in drawing
Optionally, a sediment-containment structure disclosed herein may use a secondary sieve panel and secondary boom to decrease loss of sediment over a floatable body of a sediment-containment structure. The secondary boom is a floatable body and may optionally be connectible in the same manner as segments of the sediment-containment boom described above. The sieve panel of the secondary boom is connected is any suitable manner (tying, fusing, stapling, adhesives, and other methods known or stated herein) to either a floatable body or a mesh portion of a sediment-containment structure. In use, the secondary boom is positioned outside the sediment-containment structure. As the sediment-containment structure fills, the secondary boom provides secondary containment for sediment spilling over the floatable body of a sediment-containment structure.
Further optionally, a sediment-containment structure may comprise one and preferably a plurality of stakes inserted into the water bottom outside the sediment-containment structure. These stakes may take the form of PVC or other pipes or any other body suitably stiff and strong for the application. Each stake is connected to a stake rope, which is connected to a stake-rope-to-mesh connector, which may take the form of a plastic clip attachable or attached to the mesh of a sieve panel or shared sieve panel. The stake-rope-to-mesh connector may include rings, apertures, cleats or other structures around which a cord or rope may be fastened. Where stakes and stake ropes are used, the height of a sieve panel may be selected to be substantially greater than the depth of the water, because the stake can hold the sieve panel under tension, there is less risk of fouling of the device. Also, the stakes may provide more precise control of the location and shape of the land mass formed using the structure. In this application, a land mass includes land built up above the water level in a water covered area and also includes a buildup of sediment on a water bottom decreasing the depth of water in that area. See
In another embodiment of the invention comprising stakes, the invention is used to provide a wave-bumper structure capable of protecting land against impacts of waves and other water movement. See drawing
Both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and do not restrict the invention as claimed.
The invention will be better understood in view of the following description presented with reference to the accompanying drawings:
The invention will be better understood in view of the following description presented with reference to the accompanying drawings:
Both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and do not restrict the invention as claimed.
The inventor now moves to a detailed description of an embodiment of the method of the invention, which is shown in the drawings, where like parts are labeled with like reference numerals.
1. Select a site where the method will be practiced. The site is typically a coastal marsh or wetland that has been eroded through a process that includes salt-water intrusion. Islands that have been degraded due to erosion can also be selected.
2. Measure the dimensions of the site including the depth of the water contained at various locations around the site.
3. Erect a sediment-containment structure in the manner described below.
4. Introduce sediment into the substantially closed shape formed by the sediment-containment structure.
Additionally, board or other blocking means can be added to a wasteweir segment as the height of sediment buildup increases.
The inventor now moves to a detailed description of an embodiment of the system of the invention, which is shown in the drawings, where like parts are labeled with like reference numerals. In
In the embodiment depicted in the
Each boom segment has anchor segment 50, which is attached to the lower portion of the sieve panel 60. Anchor segment 50 is made from a dense material (at least denser than water) such as lead-core line or heavy chain. Anchor segment 50 secures the device to the bottom of the water-covered area in order to prevent unwanted movement. Each anchor segment 50 has first anchor-connecting means 51 aligned with first body-connecting means 23 and second anchor-connecting means 57 aligned with second body-connecting means 27. These first and second anchor-connecting means may be any suitable known connecting means, including those listed for use as body-connecting means. Alternatively, a single, continuous anchor segment can be used to anchor all of the sieve panels.
Each boom segment 20 has tiedown 70 having first and second end portions. The first tiedown end portion is attached to body 22, and the second tiedown end portion is attached to anchor segment 50. Tiedown 70 has a length approximately equal to the depth of the water.
Wasteweir segment 80 is a three-sided frame having a base 82 having first end portion 84 and second end portion 86 and having first side element 88 and second side element 90 joined in substantially perpendicular relation to base 82. First side element 88 has first body-wasteweir connecting means 83 attached near the end thereof most remote from base 82; second side element 90 has second body-wasteweir connecting means 87 attached near the end thereof most remote from base 82.
First body-wasteweir connecting means 83 is a connector connectible to second body-connecting means 27. Second body-wasteweir connecting means 87 is a connector connectible to first body-connecting means 23. In addition, the first end portion of base 82 has attached thereto first wasteweir-anchor connecting means 96 and second wasteweir-anchor connecting means 98. First wasteweir-anchor connecting means 96 is connectible to second anchor-connecting means 57, and second wasteweir-anchor connecting means 98 is connectible to first anchor-connecting means 51.
Wasteweir first side 88 has attached thereto first wasteweir-sieve connecting means 92; second wasteweir side 90 has attached thereto second wasteweir-sieve connecting means 94. First wasteweir-sieve connecting means 92 is connectible to second sieve-panel connecting means 68. Second wasteweir-sieve connecting means 94 is connectible to first means sieve-panel connecting means 66.
The frame of wasteweir segment 80 includes longitudinal opening 100 in base 82, longitudinal opening 102 in first side 88, and longitudinal opening 104 in second side 90, each longitudinal opening being a groove adapted for receiving a board 110. These longitudinal openings constitute the barrier receiving means of this embodiment of the invention. Other barrier-receiving means would include pegs to which barriers may be affixed, magnets, rigid interlocking connectors, and holes with screws or bolts allowing the barriers to be screwed or bolted to the frame. Barriers 110 are preferably wooden boards fitted into the wasteweir segment as the level of built-up land rises in order to contain sediment while allowing for a rapid discharge of water from the water-covered area.
The inventor now moves to a detailed description of an embodiment of an amphibious dredging vehicle 700, which is an element of some embodiments of the invention.
As best seen in
The front end portions of first floatable pontoon 610 and second floatable pontoon 620 are aligned with the front end portion of deck 630. First floatable pontoon 610 has conventional drive track 612 mounted thereon. Second floatable pontoon 620 has conventional drive track 622 mounted thereon. The pontoons may be constructed of any material that is sufficiently light and durable to allow construction of a sturdy and floatable pontoon; examples include aluminum and steel.
Mounted to the front end portion of the deck 630 is cutterhead 640. Cutterhead 640 may be of any convenient design, including cylindrical or disk-shaped rotating devices or arrays of high-pressure water jets; a cylindrical rotating design is shown here. Also mounted to the deck 630 is dredge pump 650, which is operatively connected to cutterhead 640 in conventional fashion. Dredge pump 650 includes both impeller housing 651 and ten-inch hydraulic pump 652.
Also mounted near the front end portion of deck 630 is control house 632. Control house 632 provides a convenient location for operating the amphibious dredging vehicle. Tank housing 638 includes therein tanks for both diesel fuel and hydraulic fluid. A powerplant in the form of diesel engine 636 provides power to the amphibious dredging vehicle 700 through three separate paths. The powerplant also may take the form of other fuel-air engines, electric motors, or other power-providing mechanisms. Diesel engine 636 powers pump 637A that pressurizes hydraulic fluid in a conventional hydraulic circuit 737, which includes conventional tubing linking the hydraulic pump 637A to all devices that are powered by the hydraulic circuit 737.
In one path, the hydraulic circuit 737 powers the drive tracks, which allow the amphibious dredging vehicle to track forward across land or shallow water. The hydraulic circuit 737 powers a first track-driving means in the form of a first hydraulic drive motor 614 and second track-driving means in the form of second hydraulic drive motor 624. The first hydraulic drive motor 614 drives first drive track 612 through a chain and sprocket 616. The second hydraulic drive motor 624 likewise drives second hydraulic drive motor 624 drives second drive track 622 through a chain and sprocket 626. The claimed first track-driving means and the claimed second track-driving means do not have to be hydraulic drive motors. Instead, the claimed first track-driving means and the claimed second track-driving means may take the form of any device capable of providing sufficient motive power, including electric motors and mechanical transmissions driven either by a central powerplant or by individual powerplants for each track.
In the second path, the hydraulic circuit 737 provides power to a dredge-pump-driving means in the form of hydraulic drive motor 653 that drives dredge pump 650. When the dredge is being moved across deeper water from one dredging site to another, dredge pump 650 may be used to pump water through directable discharge 660 to move the amphibious dredging vehicle 700. By controlling the aim or orientation of directable discharge 660, the operator may control the direction of the amphibious dredging700 vehicle when the dredge pump 650 is being used to move the amphibious dredging vehicle 700 through water. The claimed dredge-pump-driving means does not have to be a hydraulic drive motor. Instead, the claimed dredge-pump-driving means may take the form of any device capable of providing sufficient motive power, including electric motors and mechanical transmissions driven either by a central powerplant or a powerplant dedicated to driving the dredge pump 650.
The rear end portion of the deck 630 is disposed opposite the front end portion of the deck 630. Mounted near the rear end portion of the deck 630 is directable discharge 660, which is more easily seen in
In the third path, the hydraulic circuit 737 provides power to a water-pump-driving means in the form of a hydraulic drive motor 691 that drives water pump 690. Water pump 690 may be used to pump water from water intake 694 through water discharge 692 to move the amphibious dredging vehicle 700. By controlling the aim or orientation of water discharge 692, the operator may control the direction of the amphibious dredging700 vehicle when the water pump 690 is being used to move the amphibious dredging vehicle 700 through water. The claimed water-pump-driving means does not have to be a hydraulic drive motor. Instead, the claimed water-pump-driving means may take the form of any device capable of providing sufficient motive power, including electric motors and mechanical transmissions driven either by a central powerplant or a powerplant dedicated to driving the water pump 690.
The rear end portion of the deck 630 is disposed opposite the front end portion of the deck 630. Mounted near the rear end portion of the deck 630 is water discharge 692, which is more easily seen in
This application is a continuation-in-part of applicant's U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/695,640, which is a continuation-in-part of applicant's U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/349,599, filed Jan. 23, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,827,525 B2. The disclosures of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/695,640, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/349,599, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,827,525 B2 are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10695640 | Oct 2003 | US |
Child | 11192975 | Jul 2005 | US |
Parent | 10349599 | Jan 2003 | US |
Child | 10695640 | Oct 2003 | US |