Seasonal sediment storage on mudflats adjacent to the Amazon River
210Pb and 234Th activity profiles in sediment cores from underconsolidated mudflats 300 km downdrift of the Amazon river mouth record an ephemeral surface layer of fine-grained sediment up to 1.5 m thick. This layer contains about l.5 × 10 8 tons of Amazon sediment deposited rapidly (~1 cm/d) from a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marine geology 1995, Vol.125 (3), p.303-328 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | 210Pb and
234Th activity profiles in sediment cores from underconsolidated mudflats 300 km downdrift of the Amazon river mouth record an ephemeral surface layer of fine-grained sediment up to 1.5 m thick. This layer contains about l.5 × 10
8 tons of Amazon sediment deposited rapidly (~1 cm/d) from a fluid-mud suspension (10–400 g/l) during the months between January and June. Virtually the entire layer is remobilized in July–December and the sediment is advected alongshore to the northwest. Seasonal variations in trade-wind strength and in supply of Amazon shelf sediment are thought to control emplacement, and removal of this ephemeral deposit. Solitary surface gravity waves characteristic of this setting generate a net landward sediment flux, which, with shore-normal tidal currents, controls spatial geometry of the surface layer. The resultant lens-shaped deposit dissipates incident wave energy and provides a substrate above mean high water for mangrove colonization and irregular shoreline progradation of meters per year. Macroscale (sand/silt laminations) and microscale (plasmic fabric) sedimentary structures in the ephemeral layer record diverse temporal variations (e.g., tidal and wave-induced) in bottom shear stress and sediment supply. Ephemeral deposition of 10
8 tons is inferred to be common in coastal areas associated with large and energetic river dispersal systems. |
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ISSN: | 0025-3227 1872-6151 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0025-3227(95)00017-S |