Abstract
Abstract Near bottom current measurements have been compared with sonographs revealing a variety of subtidal dune geometries at eight stations in the middle reaches of the macrotidal Tay Estuary, Scotland. At six stations, dune asymmetries did not support the tidal dominance expressed in terms of maximum or average current speeds. Determination of bottom tidal current dominance according to the length of time during which a speed of 0.5 ms −1 was exceeded, as a proxy for the inequality of the total ebb and flood tide bedload sediment transports, provides a better, but not perfect, correlation with sonographs. Other controls on dune asymmetry and reversal are height, sediment discharge rate and bottom current velocity fluctuations. The study has shown that bedload transport processes and pathways in this relatively small ( c. 8 km 2 ), dynamic part of the estuary are far more complex than previously inferred and near bed flows do not simply correspond with the surface water circulation pattern. Neither sonographs nor current data alone are adequate to gain an understanding of subtidal bedforms in such an environment.
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