Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8908199 Geomorphology 2018 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Previous experimental studies of density currents in sinuous seafloor channels have almost exclusively studied hydrodynamics either by considering time independent, instantaneous, flow measurements or by compiling time-averaged flow measurements. Here we present a novel study of the time dependent dynamics of a density driven flow in a sinuous channel fed by a source of constant discharge. The experiments show that whilst source conditions may be temporally steady, flow conditions are temporally unsteady with timescales of flow variation driven by flow interaction with channel topography. Temporal variations reveal that both downstream and cross-stream flows vary significantly from time average observations and predictions, across scales larger than those predicted for turbulence in equivalent straight channels. Large-scale variations are shown to increase the average production of turbulence across the height of the flow, providing a new mechanism for enhanced mixing of sediment within gravity currents. Further such large-scale variations in flow conditions are recorded in the change in orientation of near-bed secondary flow, providing a plausible mechanism to reduce the cross-stream transport of bedload material and explain the ultimate stabilisation of sinuous seafloor channel systems.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
, , , ,