Water Surface Elevation in the Auxiliary Lock Chamber at Lock and Dam 14 near Pleasant Valley, Iowa (June 2017)

These data were collected in support of a multi-agency effort to evaluate the feasibility of using carbon dioxide to create a barrier and prevent upstream passage of invasive fish through navigational locks. The auxiliary lock at Lock and Dam 14 on the Mississippi River near Pleasant Valley, Iowa, was chosen for a field-scale trial of the carbon dioxide barrier to be conducted in 2018. In preparation for this trial, the mixing in the lock chamber during routine operations and the fate and transport of lock water released to the pool downstream was studied using a dye tracer. In June 2017, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) performed two injections of Rhodamine WT dye into the auxiliary lock chamber as the lock was filled. The dye was injected directly into the fill water at the upstream valves on both sides of the lock. The first injection of 0.82 liters of Rhodamine WT (0.41 liters per intake) occurred at 9:50 am on June 13, 2017. The second injection of 0.25 liters of Rhodamine WT (0.125 liters per intake) occurred at 12:11 pm on June 13, 2017. Both injections started approximately 1 minute after filling of the lock began and the injections took approximately 2 minutes to complete. The total time to fill the auxiliary lock in both cases was 6 minutes. All times are in Central Daylight Time (CDT). The distribution of dye within the lock chamber and downstream of the lock was measured using eight Turner Designs C3 submersible fluorometers (1 in vertical profiling mode in the lock chamber, 6 at fixed locations downstream of the lock, and 1 mounted on a mobile survey vessel).
This data release is comprised of a time series of water surface elevation within the auxiliary lock chamber at Lock and Dam 14 on the Mississippi River near Pleasant Valley, Iowa, between June 12, 2017 and June 14, 2017. The water surface elevation within the lock chamber was monitored using an independent Van Essen Mini-Diver DI501 (SN W1006) pressure transducer deployed in the lock chamber throughout the study. A Van Essen Baro-Diver DI500 (SN T2323) was also deployed and used to monitor and compensate for changes in barometric pressure (the Mini-Diver is not vented). The water surface elevation was measured every 5 seconds.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
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datagov_dedupe_retained 20220721212438
identifier USGS:5a577588e4b01e7be245cc7e
metadata_type geospatial
modified 20200813
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-90.405375, 41.574027], [-90.405375, 41.574822], [ -90.404602999999, 41.574822], [ -90.404602999999, 41.574027], [-90.405375, 41.574027]]]}
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 88bbf1c2ea54dd34cc8f9503a1965caacc8e5c28
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-90.405375, 41.574027], [-90.405375, 41.574822], [ -90.404602999999, 41.574822], [ -90.404602999999, 41.574027], [-90.405375, 41.574027]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • geo
  • geoss
  • iowa
  • lock-and-dam-14
  • mississippi-river
  • national
  • north-america
  • pleasant-valley
  • scott-county
  • surface-water-level
  • tracer-study
  • united-states
  • usgs-5a577588e4b01e7be245cc7e
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer P. Ryan Jackson
maintainer_email pjackson@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-22T00:17:41.489493
metadata_modified 2025-11-22T00:17:41.489498
notes These data were collected in support of a multi-agency effort to evaluate the feasibility of using carbon dioxide to create a barrier and prevent upstream passage of invasive fish through navigational locks. The auxiliary lock at Lock and Dam 14 on the Mississippi River near Pleasant Valley, Iowa, was chosen for a field-scale trial of the carbon dioxide barrier to be conducted in 2018. In preparation for this trial, the mixing in the lock chamber during routine operations and the fate and transport of lock water released to the pool downstream was studied using a dye tracer. In June 2017, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) performed two injections of Rhodamine WT dye into the auxiliary lock chamber as the lock was filled. The dye was injected directly into the fill water at the upstream valves on both sides of the lock. The first injection of 0.82 liters of Rhodamine WT (0.41 liters per intake) occurred at 9:50 am on June 13, 2017. The second injection of 0.25 liters of Rhodamine WT (0.125 liters per intake) occurred at 12:11 pm on June 13, 2017. Both injections started approximately 1 minute after filling of the lock began and the injections took approximately 2 minutes to complete. The total time to fill the auxiliary lock in both cases was 6 minutes. All times are in Central Daylight Time (CDT). The distribution of dye within the lock chamber and downstream of the lock was measured using eight Turner Designs C3 submersible fluorometers (1 in vertical profiling mode in the lock chamber, 6 at fixed locations downstream of the lock, and 1 mounted on a mobile survey vessel). This data release is comprised of a time series of water surface elevation within the auxiliary lock chamber at Lock and Dam 14 on the Mississippi River near Pleasant Valley, Iowa, between June 12, 2017 and June 14, 2017. The water surface elevation within the lock chamber was monitored using an independent Van Essen Mini-Diver DI501 (SN W1006) pressure transducer deployed in the lock chamber throughout the study. A Van Essen Baro-Diver DI500 (SN T2323) was also deployed and used to monitor and compensate for changes in barometric pressure (the Mini-Diver is not vented). The water surface elevation was measured every 5 seconds.
num_resources 2
num_tags 16
title Water Surface Elevation in the Auxiliary Lock Chamber at Lock and Dam 14 near Pleasant Valley, Iowa (June 2017)