Flux and fate of fluvial sediments leaving large islands in the East Indies

Because of their generally small drainage basin areas, high topographic relief, relatively young and erodible rocks, and heavy rainfall, rivers draining the high-standing islands of the East Indies transport a disproportionately large amount of sediment to the ocean. Rivers on the islands of Sumater...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sea research 1999-03, Vol.41 (1), p.97-107
Hauptverfasser: Milliman, John D., Farnsworth, Katherine L., Albertin, Christina S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Because of their generally small drainage basin areas, high topographic relief, relatively young and erodible rocks, and heavy rainfall, rivers draining the high-standing islands of the East Indies transport a disproportionately large amount of sediment to the ocean. Rivers on the islands of Sumatera (Sumatra), Jawa (Java), Borneo, Sulawesi (Celebes), Timor and New Guinea are calculated to discharge about 4.2×10 9 t of sediment annually. Although these six islands only account for about 2% of the land area draining into the global ocean, they may be responsible for as much as 20 to 25% of the sediment export. Fluvial sediment leaving these islands is discharged into several distinctly different provinces: shallow epicontinental seas such as the Sunda Shelf, Gulf of Papua and Sea of Arafura; and narrow-shelf, active margins along the western and southern sides of Sumatra and Java, and the north coast of New Guinea. High-resolution seismic profiles in the Gulf of Papua (New Guinea) show a clinoform sequence of Holocene sediments pinching out on the mid- to outer shelf, with sediment thickness locally greater than 40 m near the coast; some — but perhaps not much — sediment escapes to the outer shelf and the deeper Papua Trough beyond. In contrast, seismic profiles off northern New Guinea show river-derived sediment prograding over and by-passing a narrow shelf that locally has buried a relict barrier reef. A small fraction of the sediment escaping the northern shelf may be transported to the eastern equatorial Pacific by way of the Equatorial Counter Current, where it may help fertilize equatorial upwelling.
ISSN:1385-1101
1873-1414
DOI:10.1016/S1385-1101(98)00040-9