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In 2009, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the City
of Santa Cruz, conducted bathymetric and topographic surveys to
determine the water storage capacity of, and the loss of capacity
owing to sedimentation in, Loch Lomond Reservoir in Santa Cruz
County, California. The topographic survey was done as a supplement
to the bathymetric survey to obtain information about temporal
changes in the upper reach of the reservoir where the water is
shallow or the reservoir may be dry, as well as to obtain
information about shoreline changes throughout the reservoir.
Results of a combined bathymetric and topographic survey using a
new, state-of-the-art method with advanced instrument technology
indicate that the maximum storage capacity of the reservoir at the
spillway altitude of 577.5 feet (National Geodetic Vertical Datum
of 1929) was 8,646 85 acre-feet in March 2009, with a confidence
level of 99 percent. This new method is a combination of
bathymetric scanning using multibeam-sidescan sonar, and
topographic surveying using laser scanning (LiDAR), which produced
a 1.64-foot-resolution grid with altitudes to 0.3-foot resolution
and an estimate of total water storage capacity at a 99-percent
confidence level. Because the volume of sedimentation in a
reservoir is considered equal to the decrease in water-storage
capacity, sedimentation in Loch Lomond Reservoir was determined by
estimating the change in storage capacity by comparing the
reservoir bed surface defined in the March 2009 survey with a
revision of the reservoir bed surface determined in a previous
investigation in November 1998. This revised reservoir-bed surface
was defined by combining altitude data from the 1998 survey with
new data collected during the current (2009) investigation to fill
gaps in the 1998 data. Limitations that determine the accuracy of
estimates of changes in the volume of sedimentation from that
estimated in each of the four previous investigations (1960, 1971,
1982, and 1998) are a result of the limitations of the survey
equipment and data-processing methods used. Previously used and new
methods were compared to determine the recent (1998-2009) change in
storage capacity and the most accurate and cost-effective means to
define the reservoir bed surface so that results can be easily
replicated in future surveys. Results of this investigation
indicate that the advanced method used in the 2009 survey
accurately captures the features of the wetted reservoir surface as
well as features along the shoreline that affect the storage
capacity calculations. Because the bathymetric and topographic data
are referenced to a datum, the results can be easily replicated or
compared with future results. Comparison of the 2009 reservoir-bed
surface with the surface defined in 1998 indicates that
sedimentation is occurring throughout the reservoir. About 320
acre-feet of sedimentation has occurred since 1998, as determined
by comparing the revised 1998 reservoir-bed surface, with an
associated maximum reservoir storage capacity of 8,965 acre-feet,
to the 2009 reservoir bed surface, with an associated maximum
capacity of 8,646 acre-feet. This sedimentation is more than 3
percent of the total storage capacity that was calculated on the
basis of the results of the 1998 bathymetric investigation.
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