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Sedimentary response of the modern Huanghe (Yellow River) delta front to water-sediment regulation schemes: Insights into hyperpycnal flow dynamics and delta stability

  • Yupeng Pan
  • , Ya Ping Wang*
  • , Wenyu Cai
  • , Shihao Liu*
  • , Fei Xing
  • , Jianhua Gao
  • , Yonggui Yu
  • , Chao Gao
  • , Zuosheng Yang
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • Hangzhou Dianzi University
  • Nanjing University
  • East China Normal University
  • Ministry of Natural Resources of the People's Republic of China
  • Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology
  • Ocean University of China

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Study region: The modern Huanghe (Yellow River) delta front, China Study focus: This study employs the forward stratigraphic model Sedflux-2D to investigate morphodynamic responses at the modern Huanghe delta front under two operating modes of the Water-Sediment Regulation Scheme (WSRS): (i) synchronous regulation (coupled peak water and sediment discharge) and (ii) asynchronous regulation (staggered flow and sediment release). Although previous studies have recognized event-scale variations in sediment transport, morphodynamic responses to different WSRS modes remain underexplored. To address this gap, water discharge and sediment supply are prescribed as independent boundary conditions to isolate the effects of regulation strategy and sediment availability. The model explicitly incorporates event-scale suspended-sediment concentration pulses capable of generating hyperpycnal flows and WSRS-induced sediment coarsening to reproduce realistic sediment-transport dynamics across event to interannual timescales. New hydrological insights for the region: Sedflux-2D simulations show that WSRS-induced sediment coarsening enhances delta-front stability on interannual timescales. At event scales, both regulation mode and sediment supply control depositional patterns and stratigraphic partitioning. Elevated sediment concentrations trigger hyperpycnal flows that increase trapping efficiency, contributing ∼27 % of total event-scale accumulation. Synchronous regulation promotes distal transport and bottomset accretion, whereas asynchronous operation concentrates proximal deposition and steepens foreset slopes. These results highlight the coupled influence of regulation timing and sediment availability on delta stability and offer guidance for optimizing WSRS to sustain sediment-starved deltas worldwide.

源语言英语
文章编号102909
期刊Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
62
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 12月 2025

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