This document discusses various methods for measuring river stage or water level, which is an important parameter in hydrologic studies. Manual staff gauges involve marking a fixed vertical staff to read water levels. Automatic recorders like float gauges and bubble gauges provide continuous recordings of stage over time. Stage data is presented as hydrographs and used to estimate flood risks and design hydraulic structures. Accurate streamflow measurement is also important and can be done directly using area-velocity methods or indirectly using hydraulic structures.
This document discusses various methods for measuring river stage or water level, which is an important parameter in hydrologic studies. Manual staff gauges involve marking a fixed vertical staff to read water levels. Automatic recorders like float gauges and bubble gauges provide continuous recordings of stage over time. Stage data is presented as hydrographs and used to estimate flood risks and design hydraulic structures. Accurate streamflow measurement is also important and can be done directly using area-velocity methods or indirectly using hydraulic structures.
This document discusses various methods for measuring river stage or water level, which is an important parameter in hydrologic studies. Manual staff gauges involve marking a fixed vertical staff to read water levels. Automatic recorders like float gauges and bubble gauges provide continuous recordings of stage over time. Stage data is presented as hydrographs and used to estimate flood risks and design hydraulic structures. Accurate streamflow measurement is also important and can be done directly using area-velocity methods or indirectly using hydraulic structures.
This document discusses various methods for measuring river stage or water level, which is an important parameter in hydrologic studies. Manual staff gauges involve marking a fixed vertical staff to read water levels. Automatic recorders like float gauges and bubble gauges provide continuous recordings of stage over time. Stage data is presented as hydrographs and used to estimate flood risks and design hydraulic structures. Accurate streamflow measurement is also important and can be done directly using area-velocity methods or indirectly using hydraulic structures.
Associate Professor, CDMM VIT, Vellore Measurement of Stage
Manual Gauges
Staff Gauge
• The simplest of stage measurements are made by
noting the elevation of the water surface in contact with a fixed graduated staff. The staff is made of a durable material with a low coefficient of expansion with respect to both temperature and moisture. It is fixed rigidly to a structure, such as an abutment, pier, wall, etc. • The staff may be vertical or inclined with clearly and accurately graduated permanent markings.
• The markings are distinctive, easy to read from a distance
and are similar to those on a surveying staff.
• Sometimes, it may not be possible to read the entire range
of water-surface elevations of a stream by a single gauge and
• In such cases the gauge is built in sections at different
locations. Such gauges are called sectional gauges.
• When installing sectional gauges, care must be taken to
provide an overlap between various gauges and to refer all the sections to the same common datum. Staff Gauge 2. Wire Gauge
• It is a gauge used to measure the water-
surface elevation from above the surface such as from a bridge or similar structure. In this, a weight is lowered by a reel to touch the water surface. • A mechanical counter measures the rotation of the wheel which is proportional to the length of the wire paid out. The operating range of this kind of gauge is about 25 m. Automatic Stage Recorders • The staff gauge and wire gauge described earlier are manual gauges. While they are simple and inexpensive, they have to be read at frequent intervals to define the variation of stage with time accurately.
• Automatic stage recorders overcome this basic
objection of manual staff gauges and find considerable use in stream-flow measurement practice. Float-Gauge Recorder
• The float-operated stage
recorder is the most common type of automatic stage recorder in use. In this, a float operating in a stilling well is balanced by means of a counterweight over the pulley of a recorder.
• Displacement of the float due to
the rising or lowering of the water-surface elevation causes an angular displacement of the pulley and hence of the input shaft of the recorder. Float-Gauge Recorder <Cont.> • Mechanical linkages convert this angular displacement to the linear displacement of a pen to record over a drum driven by clockwork. • The pen traverse is continuous with automatic reversing when it reaches the full width of the chart. • A clockwork mechanism runs the recorder for a day, week or fortnight and provides a continuous plot of stage vs time. • A good instrument will have a large-size float and least friction. • Improvements over this basic analogue model consists of models that give digital signals recorded on a storage device or transmit directly onto a central data-processing centre. • To protect the float from debris and to reduce the water surface wave effects on the recording, stilling wells are provided in all float-type stage recorder installations. • Note the intake pipes that communicate with the river and flushing arrangement to flush these intake pipes off the sediment and debris occasionally. • The water-stage recorder has to be located above the highest water level expected in the stream to prevent it from getting inundated during floods. Further, the instrument must be properly housed in a suitable enclosure to protect it from weather elements and vandalism. • On account of these, the water stage-recorder installations prove to be costly in most instances. 2. Bubble Gauge • In this gauge, compressed air or gas is made to bleed out at a very small rate through an outlet placed at the bottom of the river. A pressure gauge measures the gas pressure which in turn is equal to the water column above the outlet. • A small change in the water-surface elevation is felt as a change in pressure from the present value at the pressure gauge and this in turn is adjusted by a servo-mechanism to bring the gas to bleed at the original rate under the new head. The pressure gauge reads the new water depth which is transmitted to a recorder. Bubble Gauge The bubble gauge has certain specific advantages over a float-operated water stage recorder and these can be listed as under:
1. There is no need for costly stilling wells;
2. A large change in the stage, as much as 30 m, can be measured; 3. The recorder assembly can be quite far away from the sensing point; and 4. Due to constant bleeding action there is less likelihood of the inlet getting blocked or choked. The stage data • The stage data is often presented in the form of a plot of stage against chronological time known as stage hydrograph. • In addition to its use in the determination of stream discharge, stage data itself is of importance in design of hydraulic structures, flood warning and flood-protection works. The stage data • Reliable long-term stage data corresponding to peak floods can be analyzed statistically to estimate the design peak river stages for use in the design of hydraulic structures, such as bridges, weirs, etc.
• Historic flood stages are important in the indirect
estimation of corresponding flood discharges. In view of these diverse uses, the river stage forms an important hydrologic parameter chosen for regular observation and recording. Stage Hydrograph STREAMFLOW MEASUREMENT • Stream flow representing the runoff phase of the hydrologic cycle is the most important basic data for hydrologic studies. • It was seen in the previous chapters that precipitation, evaporation and evapo- transpiration are all difficult to measure exactly and the presently adopted methods have severe limitations. • In contrast, the measurement of stream flow is amenable to fairly accurate assessment. • Interestingly, stream flow is the only part of the hydrologic cycle that can be measured accurately.
• A stream can be defined as a flow channel into which the
surface runoff from a specified basin drains. Generally, there is considerable exchange of water between a stream and the underground water.
• Stream flow is measured in units of discharge (m3/s)
occurring at a specified time and constitutes historical data. The measurement of discharge in a stream forms an important branch of Hydrometry, the science and practice of water measurement. Measurement techniques • Stream flow measurement techniques can be broadly classified into two categories as