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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Storm Surges In The Region Of Western Alaska, Warren Blier, Stanley Keefe, Wilson Shaffer, Sung C. Kim Dec 1997

Storm Surges In The Region Of Western Alaska, Warren Blier, Stanley Keefe, Wilson Shaffer, Sung C. Kim

VIMS Articles

Within the period of the historical record there have been several occurrences of extensive damage from storm-surge-related coastal flooding in the region of Nome, Alaska. The most recent of these events, although by no means the most destructive, occurred in association with the storm of 5–6 October 1992. Despite the small population of Nome (approximately 4000 people), total damage costs exceeded $6 million. The research into the nature and causes of such flooding events has focused on this October 1992 case. The authors have, however, also examined a weaker, shorter-duration event that occurred on 20 August 1993 and, for contrast, …


Phenotypic Selection In An Intertidal Snail: Effects Of A Catastrophic Storm, G. Trussell May 1997

Phenotypic Selection In An Intertidal Snail: Effects Of A Catastrophic Storm, G. Trussell

VIMS Articles

Littorina obtusata exhibits clear morphological variation (e.g. shell height, shell length, and aperture area) among shores differentially exposed to wave energies. Selection imposed by the hydrodynamic environment is often invoked to explain the correlation between morphology and wave exposure in intertidal organisms, but rarely is this hypothesis tested. I examined the effects of a catastrophic storm on the shell length and relative shell height and aperture area of L. obtusata populations on 2 protected and 1 wave-exposed share in New England (USA) to test this hypothesis. Snails sampled after the storm had relatively squatter shells than those sampled before the …


Storm Surges In The Region Of Western Alaska, Warren Blier, Stanley Keefe, Wilson A. Shaffer, Sung C. Kim Jan 1997

Storm Surges In The Region Of Western Alaska, Warren Blier, Stanley Keefe, Wilson A. Shaffer, Sung C. Kim

VIMS Articles

Within the period of the historical record there have been several occurrences of extensive damage from storm-surge-related coastal flooding in the region of Nome, Alaska. The most recent of these events, although by no means the most destructive, occurred in association with the storm of 5–6 October 1992. Despite the small population of Nome (approximately 4000 people), total damage costs exceeded $6 million.

The research into the nature and causes of such flooding events has focused on this October 1992 case. The authors have, however, also examined a weaker, shorter-duration event that occurred on 20 August 1993 and, for contrast, …


Trophic Effects Of Sponge Feeding Within Lake Baikal's Littoral Zone .2. Sponge Abundance, Diet, Feeding Efficiency, And Carbon Flux, Aj Pile, Mark R. Patterson, M. Savarese, V I. Chernykh, V A. Fialkov Jan 1997

Trophic Effects Of Sponge Feeding Within Lake Baikal's Littoral Zone .2. Sponge Abundance, Diet, Feeding Efficiency, And Carbon Flux, Aj Pile, Mark R. Patterson, M. Savarese, V I. Chernykh, V A. Fialkov

VIMS Articles

Endemic freshwater demosponges in the littoral zone of Lake Baikal, Russia, dominate the benthic biomass, covering 44% of the benthos. We measured in situ sponge abundance and,orating and calculated sponge-mediated Fluxes of picoplankton (plankton <2 mu m) for two common species, Baikalospongia intermedia and Baikalospongia bacillifera. By means of dual-beam how cytometry, we found retention efficiencies ranging from 58 to 99% for four types of picoplankton: heterotrophic bacteria, Synechococcus-type cyanobacteria, autotrophic picoplankton with one chloroplast, and autotrophic picoplankton with two chloroplasts. By using a general model for organism-mediated fluxes, we conservatively estimate that through active suspension feeding, sponges are a sink for 1.97 g C d(-1) m(-1), mostly from procaryotic cell types. Furthermore, grazing by these extensive sponge communities can create a layer of picoplankton-depleted water overlying the benthic community in this unique lake.


Research Needs For The Risk Assessment Of Health And Environmental Effects Of Endocrine Disruptors: A Report Of The Us Epa-Sponsored Workshop, Rj Kavlock, Gp Daston, C Derosa, P Fennercrisp, Le Gray, S Kaattari, Et Al Aug 1996

Research Needs For The Risk Assessment Of Health And Environmental Effects Of Endocrine Disruptors: A Report Of The Us Epa-Sponsored Workshop, Rj Kavlock, Gp Daston, C Derosa, P Fennercrisp, Le Gray, S Kaattari, Et Al

VIMS Articles

The hypothesis has been put forward that humans and wildlife species have suffered adverse health effects after exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals. Reported adverse effects include declines in populations, increases in cancers, and reduced reproductive function. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sponsored a workshop in April 1995 to bring together interested parties in an effort to identify research gaps related to this hypothesis and to establish priorities for future research activities. Approximately 90 invited participants were organized into work groups developed around the principal reported health effects-carcinogenesis, reproductive toxicity, neurotoxicity, and immunotoxicity--as well as along the risk assessment paradigm--hazard identification, dose-response …


Temporal And Spatial Patterns In The Ross Sea: Phytoplankton Biomass, Elemental Composition, Productivity And Growth Rates, Walker O. Smith Jr., David Nelson, Giacomo R. Ditullio, Amy R. Leventer Jan 1996

Temporal And Spatial Patterns In The Ross Sea: Phytoplankton Biomass, Elemental Composition, Productivity And Growth Rates, Walker O. Smith Jr., David Nelson, Giacomo R. Ditullio, Amy R. Leventer

VIMS Articles

The temporal and spatial patterns of phytoplankton biomass, productivity, and particulate matter composition in the Ross Sea were assessed during cruises in January 1990 and February 1992. Biomass and primary productivity in the southern Ross Sea were greatest during mid-January, with surface chlorophyll concentrations, particulate organic carbon levels, and integrated primary productivity averaging 4.9 Ixg L 'l, 0.54 mg L-•, and 2.63 g C m"• d '•, respectively. Comparable mean concentrations and rates for February were 1.1 Ixg L 'l, 0.29 mg L 'l, and 0.78 g C m '•- d '• (decreases of 76, 46, and 70%, respectively), indicative …


Gas Chromatographic Isolation Of Individual Compounds From Complex Matrices For Radiocarbon Dating, Ti Eglinton, Li Alueihare, Je Bauer, Erm Druffel, Ap Mcnichol Jan 1996

Gas Chromatographic Isolation Of Individual Compounds From Complex Matrices For Radiocarbon Dating, Ti Eglinton, Li Alueihare, Je Bauer, Erm Druffel, Ap Mcnichol

VIMS Articles

This paper describes the application of a novel, practical approach for isolation of individual compounds from complex organic matrices for natural abundance radiocarbon measurement. This is achieved through the use of automated preparative capillary gas chromatography (PCGC) to separate and recover sufficient quantities of individual target compounds for C-14 analysis by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). We developed and tested this approach using a suite of samples (plant lipids, petroleums) whose ages spanned the C-14 time scale and which contained a variety of compound types (fatty acids, sterols, hydrocarbons), Comparison of individual compound and bulk radiocarbon signatures for the isotopically homogeneous …


Linking Sediment Transport And Stratigraphy On The Continental Shelf, Pl Wilberg, Da Cacchione, Rw Sternberg, L. Donelson Wright Jan 1996

Linking Sediment Transport And Stratigraphy On The Continental Shelf, Pl Wilberg, Da Cacchione, Rw Sternberg, L. Donelson Wright

VIMS Articles

The goal of the shelf sediment dynamics component of STRATAFORM is to link sediment transport processes active on the continental shelf to the formation and preservation of event beds in shelf sediment deposits. An approach combining shelf sediment-transport models with high-resolution measurements of water-column and bed properties over periods from several months to several years allows us to make quantitative estimates of bed modification caused by sediment resuspension during episodic transport events. These modifications include erosion and deposition of bed material, formation of graded storm beds, and changes in small-scale bed surface morphology. The characteristics of the resulting “event bed” …


Linking Sediment Transport And Stratigraphy On The Continental Shelf, Patrica Wiberg, David Cacchione, Richard Sternberg, L. Donelson Wright Jan 1996

Linking Sediment Transport And Stratigraphy On The Continental Shelf, Patrica Wiberg, David Cacchione, Richard Sternberg, L. Donelson Wright

VIMS Articles

The goal of the shelf sediment dynamics component of STRATAFORM is to link sediment transport processes active on the continental shelfto the formation and preservation of event beds inshelf sediment deposits. An approach combining
shelf sediment-transport models with high-resolution measurements of water-column and bed properties over periods from several months to several
years allows us to make quantitative estimates of bed modification caused by sediment resuspension during episodic transport events.


Effects Of The June 1995 Freshet On The Main Virginia Tributaries To The Chesapeake Bay, Herbert M. Austin, Christopher F. Bonzek Jan 1996

Effects Of The June 1995 Freshet On The Main Virginia Tributaries To The Chesapeake Bay, Herbert M. Austin, Christopher F. Bonzek

VIMS Articles

Environmental conditions in the Virginian waters of the Chesapeake Bay area during the summerof 1995 have been characterized as a severe drought. This drought was punctuated on 27 June with a headwater (James and Rappahannock River) rain storm that produced a "freshet". Although it did not rain in the Tidewater area of Virginia, surface salinities were depressed by the run-off, and main-stem bottom ox}'gen levels dropped to z.ero in the James and Rappahannock rivers. The effects of the reduced oxygen were apparent on the James River oyster stock, particularly the reduction in spatfall, and to a lesser degree on the …


The Magnitude And Persistence Of Soil No, N2o, Ch4, And Co, Fluxes From Burned Tropical Savanna In Brazil, M Poth, Iris C. Anderson, Et Al Nov 1995

The Magnitude And Persistence Of Soil No, N2o, Ch4, And Co, Fluxes From Burned Tropical Savanna In Brazil, M Poth, Iris C. Anderson, Et Al

VIMS Articles

Among all global ecosystems, tropical savannas are the most severely and extensively affected by anthropogenic burning. Frequency of fire in cerrado,a type of tropical savanna covering 25% of Brazil, is 2 to 4 years. In 1992 we measured soil fluxes of NO, N2O, CH4, and CO2 from cerrado sites that had been burned within the previous 2 days, 30 days, 1 year, and from a control site last burned in 1976. NO and N2O fluxes responded dramatically to fire with the highest fluxes observed from newly burned soils after addition of water. Emissions of N-trace gases after burning were of …


Calcium Carbonate Sedimentation In The Global Ocean: Linkages Between The Neritic And Pelagic Environments, John D. Milliman, Andre W. Droxler Jan 1995

Calcium Carbonate Sedimentation In The Global Ocean: Linkages Between The Neritic And Pelagic Environments, John D. Milliman, Andre W. Droxler

VIMS Articles

Other than fluvial sediment, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is the greatest source of sediment in the present-day ocean. Interest in carbonate sedimentation extends beyond geologists because the carbonate system involves biologic and geochemical
processes. Carbonate production, for example, releases CO2 but its accumulation becomes a major sink for inorganic carbon.

Unlike fluvial sediments, modern carbonates accumulate more or less equally in the neritic and pelagic environments. Neritic carbonates (benthic) are characterized by rapid production of (mostly) metastable aragonite and magnesian calcite:pelagic production of (primarily) calcite in the open ocean occurs at much slower rates but overmuch larger areas than does neritic …


Ocean Biogeochemical Fluxes - New Production And Export Of Organic-Matter From The Upper Ocean, Hw Ducklow Jan 1995

Ocean Biogeochemical Fluxes - New Production And Export Of Organic-Matter From The Upper Ocean, Hw Ducklow

VIMS Articles

Studies of ocean biogeochemical fluxes have been energized in this decade, by the urgency of our need to understand and predict the effects of continued CO2accumulation in the atmosphere, by the global perspectives offered by satellite views of ocean color and related physical fields (McClain et al. 1991; Yoder et al. 1992; Mitchell 1994), and by the successful implementation of the Joint Global Ocean Flux Study (JGOFS; Bowles and Livingston, 1993). In this review, I focus on oceanic new production, originally defined as the fraction of primary production supported by inputs of ‘new’ nitrogen from outside the euphotic …


Tidal Propagation In Strongly Convergent Channels, Carl T. Friedrichs, David G. Aubrey Feb 1994

Tidal Propagation In Strongly Convergent Channels, Carl T. Friedrichs, David G. Aubrey

VIMS Articles

Simple first‐ and second‐order analytic solutions, which diverge markedly from classical views of cooscillating tides, are derived for tidal propagation in strongly convergent channels. Theoretical predictions compare well with observations from typical examples of shallow, “funnel‐shaped” tidal estuaries. A scaling of the governing equations appropriate to these channels indicates that at first order, gradients in cross‐sectional area dominate velocity gradients in the continuity equation and the friction term dominates acceleration in the momentum equation. Finite amplitude effects, velocity gradients due to wave propagation, and local acceleration enter the equations at second order. Applying this scaling, the first‐order governing equation becomes …


Transport Of Particles Across Continental Shelves, Ca Nittrouer, Ld Wright Feb 1994

Transport Of Particles Across Continental Shelves, Ca Nittrouer, Ld Wright

VIMS Articles

Transport of particulate material across continental shelves is well demonstrated by the distributions on the seabed and in the water column of geological, chemical, or biological components, whose sources are found farther landward or farther seaward. This paper addresses passive (incapable of swimming) particles and their transport across (not necessarily off) continental shelves during high stands of sea level. Among the general factors that influence across-shelf transport are shelf geometry, latitudinal constraints, and the timescale of interest. Research studies have investigated the physical mechanisms of transport and have made quantitative estimates of mass flux across continental shelves. Important mechanisms include …


Correlation Between Electron Capture Negative Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometric Fragmentation And Calculated Internal Energies For Polychlorinated Biphenyls, John Greaves, Ellen Harvey, William G. Macintyre Jan 1994

Correlation Between Electron Capture Negative Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometric Fragmentation And Calculated Internal Energies For Polychlorinated Biphenyls, John Greaves, Ellen Harvey, William G. Macintyre

VIMS Articles

Correlations between molecular structure and fragmentation observed in electron capture negative chemical ionization mass spectra (moderator gas = methane) of 49 selected tetrachlorinated, pentachlorinated, and hexachlorinated biphenyls have been investigated by using molecular modeling. The semiempirical general molecular orbital program MOPAC was used to calculate molecular properties for biphenyl and the 209 polychlorinated biphenyls. The mass spectrometric ionization and fragmentation processes were found to be linked to the number of chlorine atoms present on the biphenyl, and to the number of those chlorine atoms in the ortho (2, 2', 6, and 6') positions. The intensity of molecular ions increased with …


Degradation Kinetics Of Aromatic Organic Solutes Introduced Into A Heterogeneous Aquifer, Wg Macintyre, M Boggs, Cp Antworth, Tb Stauffer Dec 1993

Degradation Kinetics Of Aromatic Organic Solutes Introduced Into A Heterogeneous Aquifer, Wg Macintyre, M Boggs, Cp Antworth, Tb Stauffer

VIMS Articles

Degradation rates of benzene, p-xylene, naphthalene, and o-dichlorobenzene have been measured in a heterogeneous, unconfined aquifer during a pulse injection experiment at Columbus Air Force Base, Columbus, Mississippi. Dissolved oxygen in the pulse plume maintained aerobic conditions. Degradation kinetics calculated from the complete field data set were approximately first order with the following rate constants: benzene, 0.0070 d-1; p-xylene, 0.0107 d-1; naphthalene, 0.0064 d-1; and o-dichlorobenzene, 0.0046 d-1. Reaction rates were also calculated from a near-field subset of the data using a model based on the hydrologic characteristics of the aquifer. Shapes of the degradation rate curves were consistent with …


Evaluation Of Gas-Chromatography With Electrolytic Conductivity Detection And Electron-Capture Detection And Use Of Negative Chemical Ionization Gc-Ms For The Analysis Of Pcbs In Effluents, J Greaves, E Harvey, Rj Huggett Jan 1991

Evaluation Of Gas-Chromatography With Electrolytic Conductivity Detection And Electron-Capture Detection And Use Of Negative Chemical Ionization Gc-Ms For The Analysis Of Pcbs In Effluents, J Greaves, E Harvey, Rj Huggett

VIMS Articles

Gas chromatography with electrolytic conductivity detection and electron capture detection in combination with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, operated in the electron capture negative chemical ionization mode, were evaluated as techniques for the analysis of polychlorinated biphenyls in wastewater from an industrial facility. The specificity of the electrolytic conductivity detector reduced sample turnaround time because extracts could be analyzed without fractionation or cleanup. Using a 2-L sample, this methodology had a quantification limit, based on Aroclor 1260, of 0.1-mu-g/L and a detection limit of approximately 0.03-mu-g/L. The electron capture detector was subject to interferences from nonhalogenated compounds and required additional sample cleanup. …


Marine Ecosystem Research At The Weddell Sea Ice Edge: The Ameriez Program, Walker O. Smith Jr., Dl Garrison Nov 1990

Marine Ecosystem Research At The Weddell Sea Ice Edge: The Ameriez Program, Walker O. Smith Jr., Dl Garrison

VIMS Articles

The explorers and naturalists who first visited Antarctica were struck by the large numbers of whales, seals and seabirds in such a harsh environment (summarized in Everson, 1977). Scientific expeditions in the twentieth century confirmed these observations, and also established that an even greater abundance of many different trophic levels occurred at the ice edge. Hart (1942) noted that phytoplankton were more abundant near the ice edge mad suggested that there was a distinct ice-edge flora, and Marr (1962) noted that krill (Euphausia superba) were concentrated at the interface between pack ice and open water. Routh (1949) observed …


Ancient Channels Of The Susquehanna River Beneath Chesapeake Bay And The Delmarva Peninsula, Steven M. Colman, Jeffrey P. Halka, C. Hobbs, Robert B. Mixon, David S. Foster Sep 1990

Ancient Channels Of The Susquehanna River Beneath Chesapeake Bay And The Delmarva Peninsula, Steven M. Colman, Jeffrey P. Halka, C. Hobbs, Robert B. Mixon, David S. Foster

VIMS Articles

Three generations of the ancestral Susquehanna River system have been mapped beneath Chesapeake Bay and the southern Delmarva Peninsula. Closely spaced seismic reflection profiles in the bay and boreholes in the bay and on the southern Delmarva Peninsula allow detailed reconstruction of each paleochannel system. The channel systems were formed during glacial low sea-level stands, and each contains a channel-fill sequence that records the subsequent transgression. The trunk channels of each system are 2 to 4 km wide and are incised 30 to SO m into underlying strata; they have irregular longitudinal profiles and very low gradients within the Chesapeake …


Late Pleistocene Barrier-Island Sequence Along The Southern Delmarva Peninsula: Implications For Middle Wisconsin Sea Levels, Kenneth Finkelstein, Michael S. Kearney Jan 1988

Late Pleistocene Barrier-Island Sequence Along The Southern Delmarva Peninsula: Implications For Middle Wisconsin Sea Levels, Kenneth Finkelstein, Michael S. Kearney

VIMS Articles

Evidence for a middle Wisconsin sea-level high at or above modern limits along the east coast of the United States has long been controversial. Most reports have been dismissed as poorly dated or lacking unequivocal documentation of a marine transgression. We describe here a 14C-dated, middle Wisconsin transgressive sequence with an extant subaerial barrier facies along the southern Delmarva Peninsula. This sequence indicates that sea levels were near their present position between ca. 23 and 34 ka; it may correlate with other inferred similar-age littoral deposits of the area, and it suggests that the evidence for glacioeustatic fluctuations during the …


The Formation Of Longitudinal Fronts In A Coastal Plain Estuary, Linda M. Huzzey, John M. Brubaker Jan 1988

The Formation Of Longitudinal Fronts In A Coastal Plain Estuary, Linda M. Huzzey, John M. Brubaker

VIMS Articles

Longitudinal estuarine fronts, aligned parallel to the axis of the estuary, are characteristic of the York River. Their time scale for genesis and decay is of the order of hours; they are usually located at the inner edge of the shoals or over the main channel. Field measurements have shown marked intratidal differences in density and current speeds across this estuary. These can be correlated with changes in depth and the strength of the advective processes. Differential advection between the channel and shoal regions, when acting upon a constant longitudinal density gradient, is shown to be of sufficient magnitude to …


Determination Of Tributyltin In The Marine-Environment, Rg Huggett, Michael A. Unger, Fa Espourteille, Cd Rice Jan 1988

Determination Of Tributyltin In The Marine-Environment, Rg Huggett, Michael A. Unger, Fa Espourteille, Cd Rice

VIMS Articles

Tributyltin (TBT) is a biocide used in antifouling paints to protect hulls from nuisance organisms such as barnacles, worms and algae. The use of TBT paints has increased over the past decade due to its effectiveness as an antifoulant which is related to its toxicity. Water concentrations of less than 100 ng L- have been shown to harm some aquatic species in laboratory tests and observations in the natural environment indicate that levels below 10 ng L- may be harmful. Tributyltin is bioconcentrated by many species to levels of one thousand, or more, times ambient water concentrations. Sediment-water partitioning coefficients …


Consequences Of Sediment Flux: Escape Or Entrapment?, Maynard M. Nichols Jan 1986

Consequences Of Sediment Flux: Escape Or Entrapment?, Maynard M. Nichols

VIMS Articles

Estuaries exhibit a full range of flux that extends from escape of sediment into the ocean to complete entrapment and storage within the system. The trapping efficiency of U.S. East Coast estuaries is compared with respect to long-term infilling and present- day flushing velocity , volumetric capacity , and circulatory mixing. It was found that entrapment prevails in many northern estuaries as a consequence of high volumetric capacity , low flushing velocity , and the nearly closed circulation. In many estuaries, channel deepening has reversed the " normal" trend of long-term infilling. Although dredging enhances circulatory entrapment, large-scale ocean dumping …


Air Chemistry Over The Tropical Forest Of Guyana, Gl Gregory, Rc Harriss, Rw Talbot, Ra Rasmussen, M Garstang, Mo Andrae, Rr Hinton, Et Al Jan 1986

Air Chemistry Over The Tropical Forest Of Guyana, Gl Gregory, Rc Harriss, Rw Talbot, Ra Rasmussen, M Garstang, Mo Andrae, Rr Hinton, Et Al

VIMS Articles

No abstract provided.


Mid‐Level Intrusions At The Continental Shelf Edge, Christopher S. Welch Nov 1981

Mid‐Level Intrusions At The Continental Shelf Edge, Christopher S. Welch

VIMS Articles

Observations across the continental shelf offshore from New Jersey in late summer 1976 show an intrusion of saline water at the mid level of the water column across the shelf edge front, which appears in density only as an offshore thickening of the pycnocline. This internal density field produces horizontal pressure gradient forces within the pycnocline in the onshore direction. These forces, in the linearized equation of motion with a constant eddy viscosity, drive a circulation which resembles a double Ekman spiral for internal pressure vertical distributions which are thin with respect to the Ekman depth. For thick pressure distributions, …


Tracing Kepone Contamination In James Estuary Sediments, Maynard M. Nichols, Norman H. Cutshall Jan 1981

Tracing Kepone Contamination In James Estuary Sediments, Maynard M. Nichols, Norman H. Cutshall

VIMS Articles

The escape of Kepone into the James River estuary, Virginia, for more than nine years produced widespread contamination of the sediments with important ecological consequences. The pollutant extended seaward more than 100 km from its source and contaminated an estimated 31 million tonnes of sediment to depths of more than 60 cm. Kepone spread through the food chain and to every segment of the environment from marshes to the channel floor.

Kepone escaped mainly during high river inflow from a point source in freshwater tributaries. Near the source Kepone is associated with organic material but in the low er estuary …


Enewetak (Eniwetok) Atoll- Aspects Of Nitrogen Cycle On A Coral Reef, K. L. Webb, William D. Dupaul, W. Wiebe, W. Sottile, R. E. Johannes Mar 1975

Enewetak (Eniwetok) Atoll- Aspects Of Nitrogen Cycle On A Coral Reef, K. L. Webb, William D. Dupaul, W. Wiebe, W. Sottile, R. E. Johannes

VIMS Articles

No abstract provided.


Tidal Discharge Asymmetry In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon Jan 1975

Tidal Discharge Asymmetry In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon

VIMS Articles

Tidal discharge and area‐averaged current speed were measured over complete tidal cycles at the entrance to a salt marsh drainage system near Wachapreague, Virginia. A pronounced asymmetry in curves of discharge and current speed through time was observed which can be simulated by a model incorporating semidiurnal tides and “overtides” in conjunction with marsh and channel storage relationships. As a persistent feature in marsh channel flow relationships, the asymmetry, along with an apparent difference in flood and ebb maxima, may have a systematic, long term influence on the net transport of suspended matter entering and leaving natural marshes.


Optimized Measurements Of Discharge And Suspended Sediment Transport In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon Jan 1974

Optimized Measurements Of Discharge And Suspended Sediment Transport In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon

VIMS Articles

Detailed measurements of current speed and suspended sedlment concentration distributions in a channel cross-section of a tidal marsh creek were analyzed. Subsequent sampiing Intervals In time and space were selected to provide acceptable estimates of flood and ebb transport of water and suspended sediment post the cross sectlon. Data from eight 13-hour measurement runs taken at various times of the year seem to favor a net ebb resldual of suspended sedlment transport for the year In question.

A number of environmental factors appear to Influence suspended sediment trons· port in marsh channels.Residual transport of sediment In these systems is, however, …