Title: Sedimentation and Stratigraphy Geology 5142 Dr' Thieme
1Sedimentation and StratigraphyGeology 5142Dr.
Thieme
- Lecture 15 Tidal Flats, Estuaries, and Deltas
2Tide
- cyclical rise and fall of the level of the sea
due to the gravitational attraction by the Moon,
and to a lesser extent by the Sun - spring tide (the highest high tide) occurs when
the gravitational effects of Sun and Moon
coincide - neap tide (lowest high tide) occurs when solar
and lunar gravity are working in opposition
3Tide
- Each coast's tidal cycle is affected by
- the shape and orientation of the coast
- the gradient of the coast
- the topography offshore
- wind speed and wind direction
- weather and storm patterns
4Tidal Range
- Vertical distance between high and low tide,
represented statistically as the difference in
elevation between "mean high water" (MHW) and
"mean low water" (MLW) - The greatest tidal range occurs in tidal basins
whose natural "resonance period" corresponds to
that of the principal tide-producing force
5Tidal Range
- The world's largest tidal range, approximately 15
m, is found in the Bay of Fundy - The resonance period of 12.58 hours closely
corresponds to the lunar semi-diurnal period of
12.42 hours
6Tidal Effects
- tidal range determines the degree of mixing of
fresh and salt water - stratification and circulation may develop with
less dense fresh water extending over a salt
water "wedge" - such circulation will be inhibited by larger
tidal range, resulting in less freshwater
dilution - tidal currents transport sediment, particularly
silt and clay, resulting in pulsed or "rhythmite"
deposition
7- Flaser bedding - ripple mark bedforms in which
fine muds have settled out along the top of each
set of sand laminae - periods of current activity must alternate with
periods of quiet energy in a regular cycle
Lenticular bedding - ripples or sand lenses
isolated within planar or hummocky
cross-stratified mud
8Tidal Flat
- "flask" shaped drainage basin, often linked in
series to other small basins - each basin is connected to the open sea by a
narrow channel - barrier islands typically adjoin each narrow
tidal inlet channel
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10Estuary
- from the Latin word "aestus," meaning tide
- lower course of a river which is open to the sea
- inlet of the sea reaching into a river valley as
far as the upper limit of tidal rise (Fairbridge) - some net landward movement of sediment derived
from outside the estuary mouth (Dalrymple and
others, 1992) - "drowned" river valley (e.g. Delaware Bay)
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12- Tidal Estuary
- tidal channel and tidal flat subenvironments are
most distinct where tidal range is large (gt 3 m) - tidal channel bedload may include shells and
other large clasts but is typically sand with
large-scale current ripples or dunes - tidal flat deposits are bioturbated or laminar
mud with thin sand sheets
13Tidal flat muds can be distinguished from other
muddy facies by marsh plant roots, other plant
macro-fossils, and certain species of foraminifera
Inclined heterolithic stratification
14Estuary Types
- fjord (drowned high-relief)
- fjard (drowned low-relief)
- ria (drowned bedrock meanders)
- coastal plain (funnel-shaped)
- bar-built (coast-parallel lower reach)
- blind (seasonally blocked)
- deltaic (tidally inundated delta front)
- tectonic (subsiding)
15Most modern estuary examples formed during sea
level rise (fjord, fjard, and drowned meander
types). Coastal plain, bar-built, and blind
estuaries are subtypes due to local shoreline
controls Tectonic or climatic controls may also
result in tidal inundation of river deltas, but
examples are less common.
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17Delta
- ? - The word delta was first used by Herodotus
about 490 B.C. to describe the triangular-shaped
alluvial plain formed at the mouth of the Nile
River - any deposit, subaerial or subaqueous, formed by
fluvial sediments that build into a standing body
of water (Boggs)
18Deltas and Rivers
- not all rivers form deltas
- some have an estuary at the mouth
- others have no distinctive sediment body where
the river meets the sea
19Deltas and Rivers
- the delta begins where the river channel
transforms itself into the delta channel or into
a system of distributary channels - sand and sometimes gravel continue to be
transported as bedload across the delta top to
the delta plain - delta channel facies - the delta top is dominated by channel and
overbank ("delta plain facies") deposits
20- River-dominated Delta
- delta channel and delta plain (overbank) facies
are basically fluvial deposits, similar to those
found in the meandering stream facies - unidirectional fluvial current continues into the
sea across the delta front - distributaries are spread over wide land area as
channels avulse and form a birds foot" pattern
21The "bird's foot" pattern of the Mississippi
River delta is due to the abundant sediment
supply and large river discharge relative to the
much lower wave energy for sediment transport in
the Gulf of Mexico
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23- Tide-influenced Delta
- form where the river meets a coast with a large
tidal range (gt 3 m) - tidal channels on the delta front experience flow
reversal as the flood tide balances the
downstream discharge - mud drapes
- flaser or lenticular bedding
- tidal flat deposits may or may not occur at top
of section - sandbars are aligned perpendicular to the
shoreline
24- Wave-influenced Delta
- form where strong and persistent wave energy
exceeds river or tidal energy - bedload sand or gravel is reworked by waves as
quickly as it is deposited, inhibiting the
formation of "natural levee" features - longshore currents also wash material along the
coast to form beach spits - delta front sandbars and beach ridges are aligned
perpendicular to the delta river channel
(parallel to shore)
25Fan Deltas
- form where a braided river or alluvial fan
supplies coarse gravelly detritus to a body of
still or slower-moving water - offshore slope and depth of water result in three
distinct subtypes - Gilbert-type fan delta where water reaches to the
top of a steeply-sloping shore - Shelf-type delta where the shoreline slopes
gradually and shallow waves rework the fan - Slope-type delta with a distinct increase in
slope offshore
26distinct topset, foreset, and bottomset beds are
most clearly developed in a Gilbert-type
delta G. K. Gilbert first described this
stratigraphy where Pleistocene Lake Bonneville
filled the steep slopes of the Rocky Mountains in
the western United States
27- a Gilbert-type fan delta builds up to a stable
base level, defined by the height of its topset
beds - the topset/foreset contact may be controlled by
eustatic sea level or by a bedrock nickpoint
through which meltwater begins to drain in a
system of glacial lakes
28- a Shelf-type fan delta occurs in relatively
shallow water with a gentle slope - pebbly and sandy deposits of the delta front are
separated laterally rather than vertically from
the "foresets" of the fan - clast size increases gradually offshore in
proportion to the decrease in wave energy
29- a Slope-type fan delta will form on a coast
there is a distinct increase in slope offshore - sediment transport beyond the shelf break is by
debris flows and turbidity currents - turbidite beds replace the "foresets" of the
Gilbert model and may be stacked vertically over
fine-grained bottomset beds