Small Scales Dynamics Inferred from Tidal Measurements to Mitigate Daily Floodings in the City of Douala: A Case Study of the Besseke's Flood Drain

Felix, Besack and Raphael, Onguene and Rodrigue, Ebonji Seth and Lawrence, Oben Mbeng and Betsaleel, Kouandji Bekoumb Joseph and Willy, Sone Essoh and Minette, Tomedi Eyango (2020) Small Scales Dynamics Inferred from Tidal Measurements to Mitigate Daily Floodings in the City of Douala: A Case Study of the Besseke's Flood Drain. Journal of Geography, Environment and Earth Science International, 24 (1). pp. 45-62. ISSN 2454-7352

[thumbnail of Felix2412020JGEESI54504.pdf] Text
Felix2412020JGEESI54504.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

The recently constructed Besseke’s flood drain is always filled with water due to individual or combined effect of the tide, urbanization drainage, underground plumes and precipitations runoffs. This study focused on the analysis of small scales dynamics inferred from short term tidal measurements to mitigate the daily flooding in the Besseke’s flood drain. The methodology used is based on field measurements observation. The sampling of water level was conducted during two (02) different tidal regimes in May 2019. The volume of brackish water moving in and out of the Besseke’s flood drain was calculated using the formula of O’Brien. The results showed that Spring conditions had greater amplitudes than Neap tide conditions. During Spring tides, the tidal prism that passed in the midsection of the Besseke’s flood drain (S4) was 3.5 × 101 m3. This means that only a negligible amount of the incoming brackish water reaches the Besseke’s flood drain, amplifies and causes the daily flooding. The unexpected stronger amplitudes and dynamics observed in S4 could be due to its sub estuary nature. Furthermore, the percentage composition of water in this section, showed that the fraction of brackish water changes from 85.7% during Spring tide to 77.8% in the Neap tide conditions. The overall spatial evolution revealed that, the trend in tidal prism (during Spring conditions) was (S0) > (S2) > (S1) > (S3) > (S4) with corresponding values of 2.1 × 104, 1.3 ×104, 1.0 × 104, 2.5 × 102 and 3.5 × 101 m3 respectively. Finally, Tidal prism and Cross-sectional area showed a perfect correlation (r2 = 0.96). The best fitted Cross-sectional area-Tidal prism relationship was obtained in S3 (Market) during Spring tide condition.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: GO STM Archive > Geological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@gostmarchive.com
Date Deposited: 03 Apr 2023 07:20
Last Modified: 19 Jul 2024 08:02
URI: http://journal.openarchivescholar.com/id/eprint/293

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item