Fluvial incision and coarse gravel redistribution across the modern Dead Sea shelf as a result of base-level fall |
| |
Authors: | Haggai Eyal Elad Dente Itai Haviv Yehouda Enzel Thomas Dunne Nadav G Lensky |
| |
Institution: | 1. The Freddy & Nadin Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, The Edmond J. Safra Campus, Givat Ram, Jerusalem, 91904 Israel;2. Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, 84105 Israel;3. Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA;4. Geological Survey of Israel, 32 Yesha'yahu Leibowitz, Jerusalem, 9371234 Israel |
| |
Abstract: | Global eustatic lowstands can expose vast areas of continental shelves, and occasionally the shelf edge and the continental slope. The degree of fluvial connectivity to receding shores influences the redistribution of sediments across these emerging landscapes. Shelf and slope emergence in the Dead Sea since the middle of the 20th century, offers a rare opportunity to examine evolution of stream connectivity in response to continuous base-level decline. We characterize the connectivity evolution of two streams, using high-resolution time series of aerial imagery and elevation models, field mapping, and grain-size analyses. Our rich spatiotemporal dataset of evolving channel geomorphology, sediment transport conditions, and sediment redistribution, allows calculating potential coarse sediment mobility in response to base level decline. Following shelf emergence, alluvial fans first prograded onto the low-gradient shelf under unfavourable conditions for transporting coarse sediment to the regressing shoreline. Then, with shelf and slope emergence, the two adjacent streams evolved differently. The smaller, more arid watershed still maintains its highstand delta progradation on the shelf and is practically disconnected from the receding lake. The larger catchment, heading in wetter environments and having a narrower shelf, has incised the shelf and renewed and gradually intensified the sediment transport from the highstand to the lowstand delta. Sediment mobilization to lowstand shorelines is controlled by the evolution of the channel profile and by the average speed of gravel transport (10s-100s m yr-1). These findings from the Dead Sea are relevant to fluvial processes operating on continental shelves during glacial maxima. Streams would have commonly stored high proportions of their coarse sediment on the continental shelves rather than efficiently connecting with the lowstand level. Additionally, differences in sediment routing patterns should exist among nearby streams, primarily due to continental margin geometry and watershed hydrology. © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
| |
Keywords: | cross-shelf channel sediment redistribution coarse sediment bypass channel incision continental shelf emergence |
|
|