Title of article :
Observations of tidal and springtime sediment transport in the upper Delaware Estuary
Author/Authors :
Timothy L. Cook، نويسنده , , Christopher K. Sommerfield، نويسنده , , Kuo-Chuin Wong، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Suspended-sediment transport in the upper Delaware Estuary was investigated in Spring 2003 to examine mechanisms of material exchange
from the tidal river to the turbidity maximum zone in the lower estuary. Timeseries records of currents and suspended-sediment concentration
(SSC) were obtained between 18 March and 10 June 2003 using moored instrumentation deployed at two locations spanning the tidal river estuary
transition: (1) Tinicum Island, 90 km up-estuary of the Delaware Bay mouth in tidal freshwater; and (2) New Castle Flats, 40 km down-estuary of
Tinicum in oligohaline waters. Environmental conditions during the observational period were typical for the spring season and included two river
peakflows (1000e2000 m3 s 1) and several moderate remote-wind events. Results indicate that SSC and tidal sediment flux vary spatially in the
estuary with local current magnitude and the proximity of patches of easily resuspendable sediment. Landward of the turbidity maximum zone, SSC
was not correlated with current velocity due to depletion of bed sediment sources early in the tidal cycle. In contrast, SSC and velocity within the
turbidity maximum zone were well correlated due to an abundance of fine sediment generated by resuspension and advection. At both observational
sites the depth-averaged residual current (Eulerian mean) and net sediment flux were seaward, and the flux magnitude increased 3e4 fold during
river peakflow events on account of elevated ebb flow and bottom scour. The seaward residual current, mostly compensatory flow for Stokes Drift on
flood tide, is an important mechanism of sediment transport to the estuarine turbidity maximum zone. Averaged over the 80-day study period,
the cross-sectionally averaged sediment flux past New Castle (11 4 108 kg) was significantly larger than that at Tinicum (4 1 108 kg),
and twofold larger than the estimated influx from river tributaries (5 1 108 kg). The mass imbalance (w7 108 kg) suggests that eroded
bed sediment, previously deposited and stored in the upper estuary, was a major source of material to the turbidity maximum zone in Spring 2003
Keywords :
sediment transport , estuarine sedimentation , sediment budget , Delaware River , tidal currents
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science