Dynamic changes of the Holocene Mississippi River delta plain: The delta cycle

被引:0
|
作者
Roberts, HH
机构
关键词
delta cycle; progradation; subsidence; shoreline change;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Previous geologic research on Holocene Mississippi River deltaic deposits has verified that the present delta plain and associated nearshore barrier islands and submarine shoals are either direct or indirect products of cyclic delta-building events that have operated on a variety of temporal and spatial scales. A major depositional element of the modern delta plain is the delta complex, of which there are six: (1) Maringouin, (2) Teche, (3) St. Bernard, (4) Lafourche, (5) Balize, and (6) Atchafalaya. Major delta-building events have occurred at a frequency of one every 1-2 kyr. Deposits associated with the six major delta complexes are fundamental constructional units of the delta plain, which collectively covers an area of similar to 30,000 km(2). Sedimentary deposits associated with these delta-building events range in thickness from about 10 to 100 m. Their construction is modulated by stream capture, which develops a new delta complex by way of a new river course. Delta complexes may be comprised of one or more delta lobes. As a product of this delta switching, the depositional architecture of the delta plain consists of laterally offset and stacked delta lobes. Within delta lobes are subdeltas and even smaller crevasse-splays. These smaller scale deltas sedimentologically and geomorphically mimic their larger delta lobe counterparts, but they are considerably thinner, cover less area, and have a shorter period of development and abandonment. Subdeltas are usually < 10 m thick and may fill shallow bays that cover over 300 km(2). They build and deteriorate on time-scales of 150-200 years. Crevasse-splays or overbank splays are < 5 m thick, cover only a few square kilometers, and are abandoned after several decades of active growth. Each delta evolves through a rapid regressional phase as water and sediment are captured from an antecedent river course. If highstand conditions persist long enough, deltas may prograde to the outer shelf to form wedges of deltaic sediment much thicker than their inner shelf counterparts. The delta-building process starts with the filling of interior lakes (lacustrine deltas), which is followed by bayhead delta-building at the coast, and finally by progradation across the marine shelf(shelf delta). Delta complexes and delta lobes, as well as their smaller counterparts, experience three phases of growth and abandonment: (1) rapid growth with increasing-to-stable discharge, (2) relative stability during initial stages of waning discharge, when sediment input balances the collective effects of subsidence, and (3) abandonment, followed by rapid subsidence-driven subaerial delta deterioration. In the rapid growth stage, formerly eroding-subsiding coastal environments experience delta plain accretion and coastal progradation from renewed sediment input. On the abandonment side of the cycle, marine processes overwhelm fluvial processes and rework the delta perimeter. Forced by the combined processes of subsidence, the delta surface undergoes progressive submergence. Transgressive sand bodies created by wave reworking of the delta evolve from headland beaches and spits, to barrier islands, and finally to submarine shoals as the abandonment phase is completed.
引用
收藏
页码:605 / 627
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] EAST BAY, MISSISSIPPI RIVER DELTA
    BOUM, AH
    CHMELIK, FB
    REZAK, R
    AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGISTS BULLETIN, 1971, 55 (09): : 1692 - &
  • [22] Restoring the sustainability of the Mississippi River Delta
    Kemp, G. Paul
    Day, John W.
    Freeman, Angelina M.
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2014, 65 : 131 - 146
  • [23] Sediment instability in the Mississippi River delta
    Coleman, JM
    Walker, HJ
    Grabau, WE
    JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH, 1998, 14 (03) : 872 - 881
  • [24] Nutrient Biogeochemistry During the Early Stages of Delta Development in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain
    Henry, Kelly M.
    Twilley, Robert R.
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2014, 17 (02) : 327 - 343
  • [25] Nutrient Biogeochemistry During the Early Stages of Delta Development in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain
    Kelly M. Henry
    Robert R. Twilley
    Ecosystems, 2014, 17 : 327 - 343
  • [26] Dynamic impacts of changes in river structure and connectivity on water quality under urbanization in the Yangtze River Delta plain
    Yu, Zhihui
    Wang, Qiang
    Xu, Youpeng
    Lu, Miao
    Lin, Zhixin
    Gao, Bin
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2022, 135
  • [27] Vegetation, substrate and hydrology in floating marshes in the Mississippi river delta plain wetlands, USA
    Sasser, CE
    Gosselink, JG
    Swenson, EM
    Swarzenski, CM
    Leibowitz, NC
    VEGETATIO, 1996, 122 (02): : 129 - 142
  • [28] Evolution of Depositional Environments in Response to the Holocene Sea-Level Change in the Lower Delta Plain of Nakdong River Delta, Korea
    Jeong, Eun Je
    Cheong, Daekyo
    Kim, Jin Cheul
    Lim, Hyoun Soo
    Shin, Seungwon
    APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2022, 12 (01):
  • [29] Health status in the Mississippi river Delta region
    Felix, H
    Stewart, MK
    SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2005, 98 (02) : 149 - 154
  • [30] COASTAL EUTROPHICATION NEAR THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DELTA
    TURNER, RE
    RABALAIS, NN
    NATURE, 1994, 368 (6472) : 619 - 621