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Formation and transport of fluid mud triggered by typhoon events in front of the subaqueous Changjiang Delta

  • Jieping Tang
  • , Hao Wu
  • , Fei Xing
  • , Fan Zhang*
  • , Bixuan Tang
  • , Gaocong Li
  • , Ya Ping Wang
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • Guangdong Ocean University
  • Nanjing University
  • East China Normal University
  • Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory - Guanzhou

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Fluid mud supported by waves can move downslope on a gentle slope under gravity to transport massive sediment across the continental shelf and cause significant geomorphological changes. In order to explore the formation and transportation of fluid mud under extreme conditions, we undertook in-situ measurements and observed fluid-mud-related processes triggered by a typhoon, Danas, in the subaqueous Changjiang Delta. Under the action of waves, firstly, the seabed was eroded slowly for ∼930 min caused by the wave-enhanced bed shear stress; next, rapid erosion occurred when the bed erodibility MeB doubled the value during no waves. The great change in bed erodibility implied that bed liquefaction occurred due to waves. The fluid mud occurred concurrently with the strongest waves and went through five stages with an interval of 0.5–3.5 h between each stage in which waves weakened continuously. In addition, the five fluid mud stages all underwent three identical phases, i.e., formation, stabilization, and decay. In the formation and decay phases, the bottom friction force exceeded the buoyancy gravitational force, and the gradient Richardson number (Ri) was lower than the typical threshold of 0.25, indicating that fluid mud was unstable due to high turbulence energy enhanced by Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. During the stabilization phase, the buoyancy gravity force was almost balanced with the drag friction force, and Ri was close to or higher than 0.25, suggesting a laminar fluid mud status. Eventually, the fluid mud disappeared when significant wave height decreased to <1.39 m. Our observation results showed that bed erosion and liquefaction both contributed to the formation of the fluid mud, and the fluid mud played an important role in sediment transportation and bed landforms in subaqueous deltas during extreme events.

源语言英语
文章编号107052
期刊Marine Geology
460
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 6月 2023
已对外发布

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