Alluvial architecture of the Holocene Rhine-Meuse delta (The Netherlands) and the Lower Mississippi Valley (U.S.A.)

Alluvial architecture describes the geometry, proportion, and spatial distribution of different types of fluvial deposits in an alluvial succession. Alluvial architecture is frequently subject of study, because natural resources commonly occur in ancient fluvial sequences. The ability of models to simulate alluvial architecture realistically is largely unknown due to a lack of natural data to test the models. Generating high-resolution datasets describing alluvial architecture of natural fluvial systems would help the development of better-performing models of fluvial stratigraphy. This Ph.D.-... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Gouw, M.J.P.
Dokumenttyp: Dissertation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2007
Schlagwörter: Earth Sciences / alluvial architecture / fluvial stratigraphy / connectedness ratio / channel-belt deposit proportion / Rhine-Meuse delta / Lower Mississippi Valley / channel belt / width/thickness ratio / Holocene / river delta
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27219305
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/24909

Alluvial architecture describes the geometry, proportion, and spatial distribution of different types of fluvial deposits in an alluvial succession. Alluvial architecture is frequently subject of study, because natural resources commonly occur in ancient fluvial sequences. The ability of models to simulate alluvial architecture realistically is largely unknown due to a lack of natural data to test the models. Generating high-resolution datasets describing alluvial architecture of natural fluvial systems would help the development of better-performing models of fluvial stratigraphy. This Ph.D.-thesis describes the alluvial architecture of two Holocene fluvio-deltaic settings: the Rhine-Meuse delta (The Netherlands) and the Lower Mississippi Valley (U.S.A.). The research goals were: 1) to quantify alongstream variability of channel-belt dimensions; 2) to assess the relative importance of various external controls for the formation of fluvio-deltaic wedges; 3) to quantify and compare alluvial architecture of both study areas. The alluvial-architecture parameters explored include sand-body geometry (width, thickness, and width/thickness ratio), channel-belt deposit proportion (CDP), and connectedness ratio (CR). Two particular aspects of alluvial architecture are highlighted: 1) channel-belt geometry; 2) valley-wide patterns in alluvial architecture. Channel-belt geometry was determined using cross sections across eight channel belts in the Rhine-Meuse delta and one channel belt in the Lower Mississippi Valley. It was found that the width of all channel belts encased in cohesive deposits decreases by a factor of 4 to 6.5 in a downstream direction. The width/thickness ratio decreases by a factor of 2.5 to 5. These observations are related to variations in bank erodibility and stream power that influence lateral migration rates of channels. Valley-wide patterns in alluvial architecture were quantified using detailed cross-valley sections. For each cross section, the alluvial-architecture parameters were quantified. ...