Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound” J.P. Downing, Puget Sound Books.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Erosion Erosion = the transport of sediments from weathering. *Gravity and Water are biggest factors* 1. Streams 2. Glaciers 3. Landslides 4. Waves.
Advertisements

Erosion and Deposition
Low Energy Coastlines GG3025 Lecture 2/3.
Landforms of the Fluvial System
The Grand Canyon. The Grand Canyon in Arizona was carved out of the Earth by erosion. Erosion is the process by which weathered rock and soil are moved.
Estuaries and Deltas Estuary = semi-enclosed coastal environment where freshwater and ocean water meet and mix Delta = sedimentary deposit at mouth of.
Water Biomes.
Erosion The transport of earth materials from one place to another.
“Where’s Water?” Unit: Surface Water Rivers, Lakes, and Ponds.
Estuaries Place where freshwater from a river or stream mixes with salt water from the ocean Embayment- Coastal area that is partially cut off from the.
Deposition Deposition is the process whereby sediments are “released” or “fall out” of an erosional system. River Delta Glacial Moraine Sand Dune Barrier.
Chapter 6: Erosion & Deposition
Deposition.
Continental-Margin Sedimentation during High Sea Level Fluvial and glacial valleys flooded Sediments trapped in river-mouth estuaries and fjords If much.
Reading Material On reserve in: Ocean-Fisheries library (Oceanography Teaching Building) Undergrad Library (web access) “Sediments”, from “Oceanography”
Field Trip 2 Working cruise in Puget Sound on the Thompson, UW’s oceanographic research vessel Wednesday October 12 start 7AM All day. (no class) end ~9PM.
Reading Material See class website “Sediments”, from “Oceanography”
Accessing Reading Material on Library Reserve Website: Options on left: “Course Reserves” Search by Course:
Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound” J.P. Downing, Puget Sound Books.
Estuaries and Deltas Estuary = semi-enclosed coastal environment where freshwater and ocean water meet and mix Delta = sedimentary deposit at mouth of.
Reading Material See class website “Sediments”, from “Oceanography” M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall.
River Deltas Evolve from coastal-plain estuaries Rivers with much sediment filled their estuaries during the past ~7000 y sea-level rise was slow estuaries.
Puget Sound Oceanography A bit on physics and circulation by F. Stahr Outline –general (mean) circulation –tidal circulation –mixing - where, when, consequences.
Erosion and Deposition
External Forces That Shape the Earth
Landform Geography Fluvial Systems and Landforms.
Surface Water.
Nature’s Bulldozers CGF3M Wed. Nov. 6, Glacial Erosion As glaciers move, they erode the land in two ways: plucking and abrasion. - Plucking occurs.
Weathering, Erosion, & Deposition The Wearing Down and Building Up of Earth.
Estuaries An estuary is where a river meets the sea or ocean.
Physical Features of Estuaries. Basic Information Estuaries vary in origin, size and type Estuaries vary in origin, size and type Also called: lagoons,
Quiz – 5 minutes: Separate Paper 1.In which of the following would you most likely find commercially usable reservoirs of oil or deposits of sand and gravel?
LANDFORMS OF OUR WORLD. Earth is divided into three layers. The outer layer is called the crust. Beneath the crust lies the mantle. The core is the innermost.
Changing Earth’s Surface Changing Earth's Surface Weathering –The process that breaks down and changes rocks that are exposed at Earth’s surface 8.1.
Surface Water Chapter 9 Notes.
Coasts  I can distinguish between primary and secondary coasts.  I can describe different types of beaches.
Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound” J.P. Downing, Puget Sound Books.
Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound”
The Structure of Hydrosphere. Oceans—96.5% of water found here Fresh water—3.5% of water found here Fresh water distribution:  Ice: 1.762%  Groundwater:
Puget Sound Oceanography 2009 Course overview. Geology of Puget Sound Started from Pangaea Plate movement, subduction zones, volcanoes and valleys Glaciation.
Section 1 Changing Earth’s Surface Erosion movement of weathered rock and soil from one place to another.
Land-Ocean Interactions: Estuarine Circulation. Estuary: a semi-enclosed coastal body of water which has a free connection with the open sea and within.
“Where’s Water?” Unit: Surface Water Rivers, Lakes, and Ponds.
13.1 Streams and Rivers Key Idea:
Rivers Almost half of the water that falls to the Earth’s surface eventually ends up in a stream or river (runoff), where it travels overland to the.
11.1 The Active River. Do you think a river can have a source? Describe where you would expect to find a river’s source. The source of a river is where.
GEOL 1033 (Lesson 32 & 36) ppt file
Chapter 2: The Flow of Freshwater. Draw the water cycle diagram in your daybook and label it in your own words. p.41 in your text.
Marine Biomes. 2 Types of Marine Biomes Freshwater –Rivers and Streams –Lakes and Ponds Saltwater –Ocean –Estuaries.
1. The hydrosphere 2 © Zanichelli editore 2015 Oceans and seas 3 © Zanichelli editore 2015.
Some Types of Coastlines A closer look at: Estuaries, Deltas and Barrier Islands.
Questions to be answered by a few words or numbers (2 points each)
Estuaries and Deltas Estuary = semi-enclosed coastal environment where freshwater and ocean water meet and mix Delta = sedimentary deposit at mouth of.
Warm-up What is one topic from this unit that you understand?
Chapter 13 Surface Water.
Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound”
Questions to be answered by a few words or numbers (2 points each)
Erosion Erosion is the removal of rock particles from a location.
Estuaries and Deltas Estuary = semi-enclosed coastal environment where freshwater and ocean water meet and mix Delta = sedimentary deposit at mouth of.
Water Biomes.
Erosion Erosion is the removal of rock particles from a location.
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
Water Biomes.
Erosion Erosion is the removal of rock particles from a location.
Estuaries and Deltas Estuary = semi-enclosed coastal environment where freshwater and ocean water meet and mix Delta = sedimentary deposit at mouth of.
10.4 Water’s Effect on Shaping Earth’s Surface
Water Biomes SWBAT identify marine and freshwater ecosystems along the ocean’s coast.
Water Biomes.
Erosion Erosion is the removal of rock particles from a location.
Presentation transcript:

Reading Material “River Deltas” from “The Coast of Puget Sound” J.P. Downing, Puget Sound Books

Puget Sound Morphology Glacial Origin scour – flow under ice sheet formed depressions e.g., Main Basin, Hood Canal, Lake Washington sedimentary deposits – also raised land surface glacial tills, outwash deposits, lake deposits old glacial sediment now provides new input to PS cliff erosion landslides land surface erosion

Bathymetry (water depth) Shallow entrance glacial origin – moraine oceanographic name – sill primary sill is Admiralty Inlet Several others divide PS into separate basins (>200 m) Main Basin has 46% of water volume Sinuous shape – result of origin Southern Basin has 29% of shorelines Fluvial (river) sediment supply fills PS from shoreline Whidbey Basin has 43% of tidelands

Bathymetry (water depth) Shallow entrance glacial origin – moraine oceanographic name – sill primary sill is Admiralty Inlet Several others divide PS into separate basins (>200 m) Main Basin has 46% of water volume Sinuous shape – result of origin Southern Basin has 29% of shorelines Fluvial (river) sediment supply fills PS from shoreline Whidbey Basin has 43% of tidelands

Hydrography (water properties) Salinity (amount of salt dissolved in water) river water has 0 ppt (parts per thousand) ocean water has ~35 ppt – differs around world brackish water at depth in PS – ppt Density (low salinity = low density) river plume flows over more dense brackish water Input of river water - varies with space and time northern PS rivers supply the most water small input during late summer large input during late autumn and winter rains large input during spring snowmelt

Types of river-mouth environments estuary – semi-enclosed setting river and salt water meet and mix fjord – estuary with glacial origin deep, with shallow sill near mouth delta – river mouth receiving much sediment estuary filled with sediment shoreline growing seaward

Puget Sound Sedimentation Sources of sediment shallow – shoreline erosion, landslides deep – biological productivity, algal debris much carbon decomposes, forming methane gas all depths – river discharge deltas form near river mouths river plume carries sediment deeper near sill – inflow with deep ocean water

Mechanisms associated with Sedimentation plume transport – turbid surface water river momentum, tides, wind flocculation – silt and clay particles form larger aggregates, which sink quickly landward bottom flow – traps sediment near river delta formation – thick deposits near river mouth topset = tidal flats foreset = steep surface, rapid accumulation bottomset = deep deposits, escape seaward

Deltaic Sedimentation