학술논문

Short-Term Sediment Dispersal on a Large Retreating Coastal River Delta via [sup.234]Th and [sup.7]Be Sediment Geochronology: The Mississippi River Delta Front
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Water. January, 2024, Vol. 16 Issue 3
Subject
Massachusetts
Texas
Language
English
ISSN
2073-4441
Abstract
Many Mississippi River Delta studies have shown recent declines in fluvial sediment load from the river and associated land loss. In contrast, recent sedimentary processes on the subaqueous delta are less documented. To help address this knowledge gap, multicores were collected offshore from the three main river outlets at water depths of 25–280 m in June 2017 just after the peak river discharge period, with locations selected based on 2017 U.S. Geological Survey seabed mapping. The coring locations included the undisturbed upper foreset, mudflow lobes, gullies, and the undisturbed prodelta. Nine multicores were analyzed for Beryllium-7 activity, and four cores were analyzed for excess Thorium-234 activity via gamma spectrometry, granulometry and X-radiography. Our results indicate a general trend of declining [sup.7]Be and [sup.234]Th activities and inventories with increasing distance from sources and in deeper water. The core X-radiographs are graded from the predominantly physically stratified nearshore to the more bioturbated offshore, consistent with the sedimentation patterns. Sediment focusing assessed via the [sup.7]Be and [sup.234]Th sediment inventories shows preferential sedimentation in gully and lobe environments, whereas the upper foreset and prodelta focusing factors are relatively depleted. Overall, short-term sediment deposition from the main fluvial source remains active offshore from all three major river outlets, despite the overall declining river load.
Author(s): Andrew Courtois (corresponding author) [1,*]; Samuel Bentley [2]; Jillian Maloney [3]; Kehui Xu [4]; Jason Chaytor [5]; Ioannis Y. Georgiou [1]; Michael D. Miner [1]; Jeffrey Obelcz [6]; Navid [...]