Impact of sea level rise don the sedimentology and stratigraphy of estuarine systems
Drowned-river valley estuaries are characteristic features of trailing-edge continental margins, as exemplified by the US Atlantic Coast. During marine transgressions, the classic cycle of estuarine development is one of the initial submergence and subsequent infilling, with the latter stages marked by extensive accumulations of fine-grained sediments in expanding marshes, deltas, and floodplains. Seismic surveys, vibracoring, and radiocarbon dating in the estuarine tributaries in middle Chesapeake Bay (the largest estuary along the Atlantic Coast) indicate that thick accumulations (> 25 m) of organic-rich fine-grained sediments have been deposited since the middle Holocene. However, studies of recent accretion rates (based on pollen and radionuclide analyses) suggest the marshes, which represent a near-end member of the estuarine depositional sequence, may no longer be accumulating significant volumes of sediment. Relatively rapid crustal subsidence plus eustatic sea level rise produces a local submergence of /approximately/4 mm/yr. Although marsh accretion rates in the upper eustarine tributaries approach 1 cm/yr, marsh accretion rates in the middle and lower reaches are significantly less (< 2 mm/yr) than submergence. Here, numerous marshes are converting to open water as they become increasingly flooded by the tides. This change in depositional regime is also reflected in the carbon content (decreasing) and grain size (coarsening) of the marsh sediments and tidal channel migrations. In the coming decades, the rate of the world sea level rise is projected to increase significantly. This acceleration in the global eustatic trend together with lower sediment inputs from surrounding watersheds may reverse the historic trend of estuarine infilling.
- Research Organization:
- Horn Point Environmental Labs., Cambridge, MD (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 5872300
- Report Number(s):
- CONF-880301-
- Journal Information:
- AAPG Bull.; (United States), Vol. 72:2; Conference: Annual meeting of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Houston, TX, USA, 20-23 Mar 1988
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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