EP34B-04
Turning the Tide: Estuaries Shaped by Channel-Shoal Interactions, Eco-engineers and Inherited Landscapes
Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 16:45
2005 (Moscone West)
Maarten G Kleinhans, Lisanne Braat, Jasper Leuven, Anne W Baar, Maarten van der Vegt, Marcel C.G. Van Maarseveen, Henk Markies, Chris Roosendaal and Arjan van Eijk, Utrecht Univ Fac Geoscience, Utrecht, Netherlands
Abstract:
Estuaries exhibit correlations between inlet dimensions, tidal prism and intertidal area, but to what extent estuary planform shape and shoal patterns resulted from biomorphological processes or from inherited conditions such as coastal plain and drowned valley dimensions remains unclear. We explore the hypothesis that mud flats and vegetation as a self-formed lateral confinement have effects analogous to that of river floodplain on braided versus meandering river patterns. Here we use the Delft3D numerical model and a novel tidal flume setup, the Metronome, to create estuaries from idealized initial conditions, with and without mud supply at the fluvial boundary. Experimental mud was simulated by crushed nutshell. Both the numerical and experimental estuaries were narrower with increasing mud, and had a lower degree of channel braiding. The experimental estuaries developed meanders at the river boundary with floodplain developing on the pointbar whereas cohesionless cases were more dynamic.