Numerical modeling of gravity-driven sediment transport and deposition on an energetic continental shelf: Eel River, northern California

被引:47
作者
Scully, ME [1 ]
Friedrichs, CT [1 ]
Wright, LD [1 ]
机构
[1] Coll William & Mary, Virginia Inst Marine Sci, Gloucester Point, VA 23062 USA
关键词
fluid mud; wave-supported gravity flows; critical Richardson number; STRATAFORM; Eel River continental margin;
D O I
10.1029/2002JC001467
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
A two-dimensional numerical model was applied to predict large-scale deposition by wave-supported sediment gravity flows on the Eel River continental shelf for four consecutive flood seasons using measured bathymetry, waves and river forcing. The model assumes that sediment-induced stratification maintains the near-bed Richardson number at its critical value, which determines the sediment carrying capacity of the wave boundary layer. Deposition is predicted when the gravity-driven flux of sediment exceeds the carrying capacity. The model predicted 26% of fine sediment discharged by the Eel River to be deposited on the midshelf with a magnitude and distribution largely consistent with field observations. Greatest deposition on the midshelf was predicted well north of the river mouth despite greater sediment input nearest the river mouth. Model results indicate that when the river delivers sufficient sediment to critically stratify the wave boundary layer, wave intensity and the bathymetry of the Eel shelf are the dominant factors controlling the observed pattern of deposition. Large wave energy caused the majority of fine sediment (65%) to escape the shelf as gravity-driven flows. The greatest amount of sediment was predicted to leave the shelf from the region off-shelf of the river mouth (including 11% into the Eel Canyon) where inshore sediment input was high and the concave downward bathymetry associated with the Eel River subaqueous delta prevents significant midshelf gravity-driven deposition.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 33 条
[11]  
2
[12]   SELF-SIMILARITY IN STRESS-DRIVEN ENTRAINMENT EXPERIMENTS [J].
KUNDU, PK .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 1981, 86 (NC3) :1979-1988
[13]   Surface facies and sediment dispersal patterns:: southeastern Gulf of Cadiz, Spanish continental margin [J].
López-Galindo, A ;
Rodero, J ;
Maldonado, A .
MARINE GEOLOGY, 1999, 155 (1-2) :83-98
[14]   Modeling of erosion and deposition by turbidity currents generated by river mouths [J].
Mulder, T ;
Syvitski, JPM ;
Skene, KI .
JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH, 1998, 68 (01) :124-137
[15]   TURBIDITY CURRENTS GENERATED AT RIVER MOUTHS DURING EXCEPTIONAL DISCHARGES TO THE WORLD OCEANS [J].
MULDER, T ;
SYVITSKI, JPM .
JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 1995, 103 (03) :285-299
[16]   Rapid deposition of fluvial sediment in the Eel Canyon, northern California [J].
Mullenbach, BL ;
Nittrouer, CA .
CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2000, 20 (16) :2191-2212
[17]   STRATAFORM: overview of its design and synthesis of its results [J].
Nittrouer, CA .
MARINE GEOLOGY, 1999, 154 (1-4) :3-12
[18]   Observations of storm and river flood-driven sediment transport on the northern California continental shelf [J].
Ogston, AS ;
Cacchione, DA ;
Sternberg, RW ;
Kineke, GC .
CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2000, 20 (16) :2141-2162
[19]   SELF-ACCELERATING TURBIDITY CURRENTS [J].
PARKER, G ;
FUKUSHIMA, Y ;
PANTIN, HM .
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 1986, 171 :145-181
[20]  
PRICE JF, 1979, J FLUID MECH, V90, P509, DOI 10.1017/S0022112079002366