The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Morphodynamic evolution and stratal architecture of translating tidal point bars: Inferences from the northern Venice Lagoon (Italy)

Morphodynamic evolution and stratal architecture of translating tidal point bars: Inferences from the northern Venice Lagoon (Italy)
Morphodynamic evolution and stratal architecture of translating tidal point bars: Inferences from the northern Venice Lagoon (Italy)
The widespread distribution of tidal creeks and channels that undertake meandering behaviour in modern coasts contrasts with their limited documentation in the fossil record, where point-bar elements arising from the interaction between a mix of both fluvial and tidal currents are mainly documented. The sedimentary products of tidal channel-bend evolution are relatively poorly known, and few studies have focused previously on specific facies models for tidal point bars present in modern settings. This study improves understanding of tidal channel meander bends through a multi-disciplinary approach that combines analyses of historical aerial photographs, measurements of in-channel flow velocity, high-resolution facies analyses of sedimentary cores and three-dimensional architectural modelling. The studied channel bend (12 to 15 m wide and 2 to 3 m deep) drains a salt marsh area located in the north-eastern sector of the microtidal Venice Lagoon, Italy. Historical photographs show that, during the past 77 years, the bend has translated seaward ca 15 m. Results show that the channel bend formed on a non-vegetated mud flat that was progressively colonized by vegetation. Seaward translation occurred under aggradational conditions, with an overall migration rate of 0·2 to 0·3 m year−1, and was promoted by the occurrence of cohesive, poorly erodible outer bank deposits. Ebb currents are dominant, and translation of the channel bend promotes erosion and deposition along the landward and seaward side of the bar, respectively. Tidal currents show a clear asymmetry in terms of velocity distribution, and their offset pattern provides a peculiar grain-size distribution within the bar. During the flood stage, sand sedimentation occurs in the upper part of the bar, where the maximum flow velocity occurs. During the ebb stage, the bar experiences the secondary helical flow that accumulates sand at the toe of the bar. Lateral stacking of flood and ebb deposits has caused the formation of localized coarsening-upward and fining-upward sedimentary packages, respectively.
0037-0746
1354-1377
Ghinassi, Massimiliano
05d86b92-bac0-4cea-8c56-9494495d920f
D’alpaos, Andrea
53cf257a-4720-4319-8dc0-0a7fc07188c1
Gasparotto, Andrea
e47e07cd-358a-4ee2-a3bd-5ee836fa5f0e
Carniello, Luca
634db373-c16f-4401-baaf-68a074ca196a
Brivio, Lara
4415fb6d-574a-40e7-8877-e54190bca7d0
Finotello, Alvise
6eb85db0-f87f-4995-a43d-3d9c396dc2e7
Roner, Marcella
664ed3d2-bb88-478d-91d0-775b0328b8b9
Franceschinis, Erica
5f55ad33-81f5-49d4-a44b-d75773ab7b6f
Realdon, Nicola
b93f3ac1-bd29-4b3a-b2da-292c5762bef3
Howes, Nick
a710d2f0-2146-435b-befd-dd903f3709e9
Cantelli, Alessandro
a40974b9-6b31-4bc8-aa81-d4f555d8c167
Ghinassi, Massimiliano
05d86b92-bac0-4cea-8c56-9494495d920f
D’alpaos, Andrea
53cf257a-4720-4319-8dc0-0a7fc07188c1
Gasparotto, Andrea
e47e07cd-358a-4ee2-a3bd-5ee836fa5f0e
Carniello, Luca
634db373-c16f-4401-baaf-68a074ca196a
Brivio, Lara
4415fb6d-574a-40e7-8877-e54190bca7d0
Finotello, Alvise
6eb85db0-f87f-4995-a43d-3d9c396dc2e7
Roner, Marcella
664ed3d2-bb88-478d-91d0-775b0328b8b9
Franceschinis, Erica
5f55ad33-81f5-49d4-a44b-d75773ab7b6f
Realdon, Nicola
b93f3ac1-bd29-4b3a-b2da-292c5762bef3
Howes, Nick
a710d2f0-2146-435b-befd-dd903f3709e9
Cantelli, Alessandro
a40974b9-6b31-4bc8-aa81-d4f555d8c167

Ghinassi, Massimiliano, D’alpaos, Andrea, Gasparotto, Andrea, Carniello, Luca, Brivio, Lara, Finotello, Alvise, Roner, Marcella, Franceschinis, Erica, Realdon, Nicola, Howes, Nick and Cantelli, Alessandro (2018) Morphodynamic evolution and stratal architecture of translating tidal point bars: Inferences from the northern Venice Lagoon (Italy). Sedimentology, 65 (4), 1354-1377. (doi:10.1111/sed.12425).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The widespread distribution of tidal creeks and channels that undertake meandering behaviour in modern coasts contrasts with their limited documentation in the fossil record, where point-bar elements arising from the interaction between a mix of both fluvial and tidal currents are mainly documented. The sedimentary products of tidal channel-bend evolution are relatively poorly known, and few studies have focused previously on specific facies models for tidal point bars present in modern settings. This study improves understanding of tidal channel meander bends through a multi-disciplinary approach that combines analyses of historical aerial photographs, measurements of in-channel flow velocity, high-resolution facies analyses of sedimentary cores and three-dimensional architectural modelling. The studied channel bend (12 to 15 m wide and 2 to 3 m deep) drains a salt marsh area located in the north-eastern sector of the microtidal Venice Lagoon, Italy. Historical photographs show that, during the past 77 years, the bend has translated seaward ca 15 m. Results show that the channel bend formed on a non-vegetated mud flat that was progressively colonized by vegetation. Seaward translation occurred under aggradational conditions, with an overall migration rate of 0·2 to 0·3 m year−1, and was promoted by the occurrence of cohesive, poorly erodible outer bank deposits. Ebb currents are dominant, and translation of the channel bend promotes erosion and deposition along the landward and seaward side of the bar, respectively. Tidal currents show a clear asymmetry in terms of velocity distribution, and their offset pattern provides a peculiar grain-size distribution within the bar. During the flood stage, sand sedimentation occurs in the upper part of the bar, where the maximum flow velocity occurs. During the ebb stage, the bar experiences the secondary helical flow that accumulates sand at the toe of the bar. Lateral stacking of flood and ebb deposits has caused the formation of localized coarsening-upward and fining-upward sedimentary packages, respectively.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 December 2017
Published date: 18 May 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494515
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494515
ISSN: 0037-0746
PURE UUID: 1f1af987-3a1d-454a-ad4d-f54879a3e422
ORCID for Andrea Gasparotto: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9320-5480

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 10 Oct 2024 16:30
Last modified: 11 Oct 2024 02:09

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Massimiliano Ghinassi
Author: Andrea D’alpaos
Author: Andrea Gasparotto ORCID iD
Author: Luca Carniello
Author: Lara Brivio
Author: Alvise Finotello
Author: Marcella Roner
Author: Erica Franceschinis
Author: Nicola Realdon
Author: Nick Howes
Author: Alessandro Cantelli

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×