4.5 Article

A morphological investigation of marine transgression in estuaries

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 626-641

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.5050

Keywords

accommodation space; constraints; estuary; sea level rise; sediment budget; morphokinematic model; morphology

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41976156, 51620105005]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20200077]

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The paper focuses on alluvial estuaries in river valleys and their response to sea level rise, particularly how estuary morphology moves in response to changes in accommodation space. The study shows that the transgression distance of the estuary is closely related to the floodplain area, with a smaller floodplain resulting in less landward movement and increased sensitivity to changes in sea level rise or sediment supply. The availability of sediment and the rate of sea level rise are crucial factors affecting the restoration capacity of the estuary system.
The landscape setting of estuaries varies widely and is an important aspect of determining how they evolve. This paper focusses on alluvial estuaries in river valleys and how they respond to sea level rise. We examine the implications of marine transgression, as a response to sea level rise, where the estuary moves upwards and landwards to maintain its position in the tidal frame (so-called stratigraphic rollover). Here we encapsulate such kinematic movement of the estuary morphology using a 'morphokinematic' model, to assess the potential response to sea level rise and sediment supply. The model of the estuary form includes a single convergent channel, intertidal and surrounding floodplains (the valley) and allows the relative importance of the space available for deposition of sediments, the accommodation space, to be investigated as a function of rates of sea level rise and sediment supply. The transgression of the system is determined using a sediment mass balance, taking account of any supply from the river and marine environment. Model results confirm that the transgression distance, measured as the distance the entity moves landward, varies in proportion to the change in accommodation space, which mainly depends on the floodplain area. As the size of the floodplain reduces, the transgression distance is less and the system becomes much more sensitive to changes in the rate of sea level rise or changes in sediment supply. The greater demand for sediment when a floodplain is present results in greater cannibalization of the estuary form (i.e. greater landward movement) to meet the sediment demand. When the floodplain is disconnected from the estuary, the synergistic relationship is lost and the accommodation space increases. The capacity for restoration will depend on the availability of sediment and the prevailing rate of sea level rise. (c) 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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