Abstract

AbstractEstuaries typically show converging planforms from the sea into the land. Nevertheless, their planform is rarely perfectly exponential and often shows curvature and the presence of embayments. Here we test the degree to which the shapes and dimensions of tidal sandbars depend on estuary planform. We assembled a dataset with 35 estuary planforms and properties of 190 tidal bars to induce broad‐brush but significant empirical relations between channel planform, hydraulic geometry and bar pattern, and tested a linear stability theory for bar pattern. We found that the location where bars form is largely controlled by the excess width of a channel, which is calculated as the observed channel width minus the width of an ideal exponentially widening estuary. In general, the summed width of bars approximates the excess width as measured in the along‐channel variation of three estuaries for which bathymetry was available as well as for the local measurements in the 35 investigated estuaries. Bar dimensions can be predicted by either the channel width or the tidal prism, because channel width also strongly depends on local tidal prism. Also braiding index was predicted within a factor of 2 from excess width divided by the predicted bar width. Our results imply that estuary planform shape, including mudflats and saltmarsh as well as bar pattern, depend on inherited Holocene topography and lithology and that eventually convergent channels will form if sufficient sediment is available. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Highlights

  • Estuaries are converging bodies of water that have inflow of river water at the landward boundary and an open connection to the sea

  • This requires that (i) the estuary has adapted to Holocene sea-level rise, (ii) sufficient sediment and time were available for the adaptation and (iii) the antecedent topography could adapt, which excludes substrates that are erosion resistant

  • We found that simple empirical relations adequately describe bar dimensions and braiding index

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Summary

Introduction

Estuaries are converging bodies of water that have inflow of river water at the landward boundary and an open connection to the sea. Ideal estuary behaviour has been argued to arise when an estuary has adapted its shape to the boundary conditions by sedimentation and erosion (Townend, 2012, Savenije, 2015). This requires that (i) the estuary has adapted to Holocene sea-level rise, (ii) sufficient sediment and time were available for the adaptation and (iii) the antecedent topography could adapt, which excludes substrates that are erosion resistant. Due to sea-level rise, sediment supply and time for adaptation, the estuary shape deviates from an ideal shape

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