Earth Science in the Urban Ocean: The Southern California Continental Borderland

Dispersal of river sediment in the Southern California Bight
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Published:January 01, 2009
The rivers of Southern California deliver episodic pulses of water, sediment, nutrients, and pollutants to the region's coastal waters. Although river-sediment dispersal is observed in positively buoyant (hypopycnal) turbid plumes extending tens of kilometers from river mouths, very little of the river sediment is found in these plumes. Rather, river sediment settles quickly from hypopycnal plumes to the seabed, where transport is controlled by bottom-boundary layer processes, presumably including fluid-mud (hyperpycnal) gravity currents. Here we investigate the geographical patterns of river-sediment dispersal processes by examining suspended-sediment concentrations and loads and the continental shelf morphology offshore river mouths. Throughout Southern California,...
- bottom features
- buoyancy
- California
- coastal sedimentation
- continental borderland
- continental margin sedimentation
- continental shelf
- discharge
- East Pacific
- fluvial sedimentation
- gravity flows
- hydrology
- Los Angeles County California
- North Pacific
- Northeast Pacific
- Orange County California
- Pacific Ocean
- Peninsular Ranges
- rivers and streams
- San Diego County California
- Santa Barbara County California
- sediment transport
- sedimentation
- sediments
- Southern California
- stream sediments
- suspended materials
- Transverse Ranges
- turbidity
- United States
- Ventura County California
- Santa Clara River
- Tijuana River
- Ventura River
- Southern California Bight
- Calleguas Creek