Characteristics of estuarine sediments of the United States.

Date

1972

Authors

Folger, D.W.

Journal Title

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Volume Title

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Abstract

The texture and composition of bottom sediments in the estuarine zones of the United States are a function of the geologic, bathymetric, and hydrologic settings in which they were deposited. On the northeast and northwest coasts, where sediment supply has been inadequate to fill many of the deep drowned river valleys or glacially scoured estuaries, clay and silt in the deep central parts of the bays most commonly grade shoreward and seaward into sand. On the Oregon and northern California coasts, where both sediment supply and tidal range are large, clay and silt are commonly swept from the deep channels and deposited on marginal tidal flats. On the gulf coast, where tidal ranges are small and where rivers transport abundant fine material to the coast, estuaries are generally shallow. Silt and clay near the center of these bar-built estuaries and lagoons grade into sand around the margins. Deltas are common in many of the gulf coast bays and have, in several, prograded across the estuarine zone onto the continental shelf.

Description

94 p.

Keywords

estuaries, sediment analysis, detritus, clays, silt, sand, kaolinite, montmorillonite, illite, chemical compounds

Citation