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Sediment Transport Models

Dates

Publication Date
2016-07-01

Citation

John Y Takekawa(Principal Investigator), Karen Thorne(Principal Investigator), California Landscape Conservation Cooperative(funder), California Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), 2016-07-01(Publication), Sediment Transport Models, http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12237-015-0056-y

Summary

Salt marsh elevation and geomorphic stability depends on mineral sedimentation. Many Mediterranean-climate salt marshes along southern California, USA coast import sediment during El Niño storm events, but sediment fluxes and mechanisms during dry weather are potentially important for marsh stability. We calculated tidal creek sediment fluxes within a highly modified, sediment-starved, 1.5-km2 salt marsh (Seal Beach) and a less modified 1-km2 marsh (Mugu) with fluvial sediment supply. We measured salt marsh plain suspended sediment concentration and vertical accretion using single stage samplers and marker horizons. At Seal Beach, a 2014 storm yielded 39 and 28 g/s mean sediment fluxes and imported 12,000 and 8800 kg in a western and [...]

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md_metadata.json 15.04 KB application/json
BalancedSedimentFluxesRosencranzetal2015.pdf 1.9 MB application/pdf

Communities

  • California Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

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Type Scheme Key
urn:uuid urn:uuid 96a53096-325f-4b5c-aa6f-d91ee36fff4e

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