Bathymetry of Swiss Lakes
Swath bathymetric investigations of Swiss lakes. Implications for lake floor processes and natural hazards
Current
knowledge of the morphology of the lake floors in Switzerland is in many places
limited to a rough idea of the topography of the basins. The majority of the
available data were collected more than 50 years ago for general mapping
purposes, using single soundings (with wires) or single beam echosounders
(acoustic measurements). The spatial density of these depth measurements is
relatively low so that medium- to small-scale details cannot be identified.
However, a detailed knowledge of the structure of lake floors is valuable with
regard to many issues, e.g. in order to track physical processes such as
sediment transport or mass wasting at different scales from metres to
kilometres.
In order to substantially improve our knowledge of the lake
floor, state-of-the-art swath bathymetry technology is applied for the first
time in Swiss lakes in the framework of a pilot project. These modern
hydrographic survey systems (multibeam echosounders, interferometric sonars)
allow the collection of large datasets (Digital Terrain Models, DTMs) in
relatively short time and yield resolutions that have not been possible with
older techniques. Depending on water depth, a horizontal resolution of down to
less than 1 m and a vertical resolution of a few dm are reached. This is
sufficient to create geomorphological maps and images/visualisations based on
the DTMs that include a wealth of features ranging from e.g. bedforms related to
sediment transport (dunes, channels, levees), traces of subaquatic mass
movements (slide scars, mass flow deposits and deformation structures in
adjacent sediments), bedrock structures (bedding and fault traces) and features
probably related to fluid expulsion (pockmarks) to large-scale elements such as
subaquatic moraines or rockslide/rockfall deposits.
Based on the DTMs,
detailed quantitative descriptions are as well possible as visual
interpretations of the lake floor morphologies using computer-generated images.
Periodic repetitions of such surveys allow tracking the evolution of the lake
floor quantitatively over time. The availability of accurate maps of the lake
also provides an opportunity for other disciplines of lake research to focus on
the areas of interest more easily. Finally, the high-resolution DTMs are of
great use for practical applications such as exploitation of natural resources
(gravel mining), engineering and construction, charts for navigation or
investigation of waste deposits. Ongoing work for this project includes pilot
surveys in Swiss lakes and an evaluation of the applicability of the data to
scientific questions (earth and environmental sciences). Special emphasis is put
on the sedimentary processes and the evolution of river deltas.
Eawag News
Revealing the secrets of the lake floor [...]
Publication
Hilbe M., Anselmetti F.S., Eilertsen R.S., Hansen L. (2008) Spuren von Massenbewegungen auf dem Grund des Vierwaldstättersees bei Weggis: Die Ereignisse von 1601 und 1795. Bulletin für Angewandte Geologie 13, 83-85 [pdf, 673KB]

