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Residual Sediment Transport in Tidally Energetic Estuarine Channels With Lateral Bathymetric Variation
Author(s) -
Zhou Jian,
Stacey Mark T.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1029/2020jc016140
Subject(s) - advection , bathymetry , geology , stratification (seeds) , sediment transport , sediment , estuary , flushing , buoyancy , tidal range , oceanography , geomorphology , mechanics , physics , medicine , seed dormancy , germination , botany , biology , thermodynamics , endocrinology , dormancy
The residual sediment transport in tidally energetic estuarine channels is investigated by means of idealized cross‐sectional modeling. The lateral bathymetric variation follows a Gaussian profile, assuming longitudinal uniformity. The total along‐channel residual sediment flux is decomposed into contributions from an advective flux and a tidal pumping flux. Two important mechanisms are found to modify the tidal covariance between sediment concentration and current velocity, thereby contributing to the tidal pumping of sediment. First, longitudinal and lateral straining of salinity leads to tidal asymmetries in stratification and thus sediment resuspension. Second, lateral circulations directly redistribute suspended sediments within the cross section, which are then differentially transported by the along‐channel tidal currents. A general relationship between the phasing of the lateral circulations and the resulting lateral‐advection‐driven tidal pumping is proposed. Reduced‐physics experiments with lateral sediment advection turned off provide the first evidence that lateral‐advection‐driven tidal pumping plays a leading role in sediment transport for tidally energetic estuaries with nonnegligible lateral depth gradients. Additionally, a temporal decomposition breaks down the cross‐sectionally averaged tidal pumping flux into individual contributions from different tidal phases (early tide, peak tide, and late tide), providing a new perspective on tidal asymmetry in sediment resuspension and settling. The direction and strength of tidal pumping (both stratification‐driven and lateral‐advection‐driven) are shown to depend on lateral bathymetry, sediment grain size, and longitudinal buoyancy gradient forcing.

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