Abstract

Flood- and ebb-tide cycles produce differing bedforms, sedimentary structures, thicknesses of sedimentary units, and most important, grain-size distributions. Differences are the result of changes in bed shear, flow regime, and mechanisms of sediment transport. The salt wedge developed in flood-tide flow produces a stratified highest rate of salinity change. This relation results in upper flow regime as predicted by the densimatic Froude relation; trochoidal sand waves to 2 m in height are formed. Surface waves and internal waves are seen in the salinity stratification. Ebb flow modifies the sand wave surface, and sediment transport is by ripples and dunes in the lower flow regime. Large-scale planar crossbedding is produced by flood flow; small-scale ripple and dune structures are developed by ebb flow. The estuary is an effective mechanism for size segregation. Suspension populations are removed by both flood and ebb flows. There is a net inland transport of suspended sediment with deposition on tidal flats and marshes. A single log-normal source population is fractionated into several differing populations by bedload transport, suspension, and recycling during successive tidal cycles. Characteristic log-probability size distributions are developed in different environments. End_of_Article - Last_Page 659------------

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call