4.7 Article

The Influence of Transport Stage on Preserved Fluvial Cross Strata

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 49, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022GL099808

Keywords

cross strata; paleohydraulics; dunes; sediment transport; rock record

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR 1935669]
  2. American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund
  3. University of California Chancellor's Graduate Student Fellowship

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Fluvial cross strata are depositional products that record the formative flow and sediment transport conditions on planetary bodies. The study found that the evolution of bedforms and the thickness of preserved sets have a parabolic dependence on transport stage, with maximum values observed at intermediate transport stages. The results suggest that transport stage is a key control on the flow-depth-normalized set thickness.
Fluvial cross strata are depositional products of bedform migration that record formative flow and sediment transport conditions on planetary bodies. Bedform evolution varies with transport stage even under constant flow depths, but our understanding of how prevailing sediment transport conditions affect preserved cross strata is limited. Here, we analyzed experimental bedform evolution and preserved set thickness spanning threshold-of-motion to suspension-dominated transport conditions at multiple equilibrium flow depths. Results show that bedform trough depth and mean preserved set thickness have a parabolic dependence on transport stage, with maximum values observed at intermediate transport stages. Our results indicate that transport stage is a key control on the flow-depth-normalized set thickness but set thickness is a poor indicator of flow depth. Thus, the dependence of bedform dimensions on transport stage should be considered in paleohydraulic reconstruction, and the analysis of set thickness may aid in the estimation of ancient fluvial sediment flux.

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