Abstract

AbstractAlthough most deltas are expected to lose land due to climate change and urbanization, tide‐dominated deltas have been suggested to gain land. The processes of land change in such deltas are, however, not well understood, and tide‐dominated deltas with all their known morphological attributes have not been simulated before. Our Delft3D simulations successfully reproduce tide‐dominated delta morphology, and show that tide‐dominated deltas with seaward widening and stable channels, elongate tidal bars and a funnel shape form when bidirectional tidal flow occurs along the whole delta. In contrast, tide‐influenced but river‐dominated deltas protrude from shoreline, and are efficient at gaining land by mouth bar deposition and bifurcations. These differences are a function of tidal‐fluvial interactions expressed by month‐averaged seaward and lateral velocities. Identification of delta types is thus critical for predicting future land change. We propose morphological metrics to differentiate river‐ and tide‐dominated deltas and test metrics on 40 modern deltas.

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