학술논문

Controls on upstream-migrating bed forms in sandy submarine channels
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 51(12):1137-1142
Subject
23|Geomorphology
bathymetry
bedforms
benthic environment
channels
currents
East Pacific
fluid dynamics
fluid flow
fluvial features
Froude number
marine environment
Monterey Canyon
Navier-Stokes equations
North Pacific
Northeast Pacific
numerical models
ocean floors
Pacific Ocean
sediment transport
shear stress
slopes
submarine environment
transport
turbidity
turbidity currents
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Submarine channels parallel river channels in their ability to transport sediment. However in contrast to rivers, sediment transport and bed-form development in submarine channels are less well understood. Many steep (>1°), sandy submarine channels are dominated by upstream-migrating bed forms. The flow conditions required to form these upstream-migrating bed forms remain debated because the interactions between turbidity currents and active bed forms are difficult to measure directly. Consequently, we used a depth-resolved numerical model to test the role of flow parameters that are hypothesized to control the formation of upstream-migrating bed forms in submarine channels. While our modeling results confirmed the importance of previously identified flow parameters (e.g., densiometric Froude number), we found that basal sediment concentration in turbidity currents is the strongest predictor of upstream-migrating bed-form formation. Our model shows how locally steep gradients enable high sediment concentrations (average >5 vol%) in the basal parts of flows, which allow the development of cyclic step instabilities and their associated bed forms. This new insight explains the previously puzzling observation that upstream-migrating bed forms are abundant in proximal, steep, sandy reaches of submarine channels, while their occurrence becomes more intermittent downslope.