Hyperpycnal flows are turbid river plumes that can plunge to form turbidity currents where they enter a water body of lesser density. Because these flows provide one of the most direct connections between terrestrial sediment sources and marine depositional sinks, their deposits might preserve an important record across a variety of climatic and tectonic settings. A leading hypothesis assumes that hyperpycnal-flow velocity scales directly with river discharge, such that individual turbidites record the rising and falling discharge of a flooding river. We tested this hypothesis using a one-dimensional flow model and found that turbid river flow must move through a backwater zone, depth-limited plume, and plunging zone before becoming a turbi...
Hsu, Tian-JianThe understanding of river-borne sediment dispersal is important for several reasons. ...
Although sea-level highstands are typically associated with sediment-starved continental shelves, hi...
Rivers (on land) and turbidity currents (in the ocean) are the most important sediment transport pro...
Turbid river plumes entering ocean or lake water of lesser density (i.e., hyperpycnal plumes) can pl...
T his chapter focuses on the processes, character, and significance of hyper-pycnal floods and their...
Turbidity currents, and other types of underwater sediment density flow, are arguably the most impor...
Turbidity currents triggered at river mouths form an important highway for sediment, organic carbon,...
Rivers draining the tectonically active island of Taiwan commonly discharge suspended sediment to th...
Sediment transport around the globe is dominated by rivers and turbidity currents. While rivers shap...
Turbidity currents in the submarine seascape are what river flows are in terrestrial landscapes. Whi...
The majority of the huge annual sediment load of the Yellow River in China is transported by a few h...
Submarine turbidity currents create some of the largest sediment accumulations on Earth, yet there a...
Theoretical and experimental interest in the transport and deposition of sediments from rivers to oc...
During floods, the density of river water usually increases due to the increase in the concentration...
The principle transport agent in deep ocean environments are turbidity currents, avalanches of sedim...
Hsu, Tian-JianThe understanding of river-borne sediment dispersal is important for several reasons. ...
Although sea-level highstands are typically associated with sediment-starved continental shelves, hi...
Rivers (on land) and turbidity currents (in the ocean) are the most important sediment transport pro...
Turbid river plumes entering ocean or lake water of lesser density (i.e., hyperpycnal plumes) can pl...
T his chapter focuses on the processes, character, and significance of hyper-pycnal floods and their...
Turbidity currents, and other types of underwater sediment density flow, are arguably the most impor...
Turbidity currents triggered at river mouths form an important highway for sediment, organic carbon,...
Rivers draining the tectonically active island of Taiwan commonly discharge suspended sediment to th...
Sediment transport around the globe is dominated by rivers and turbidity currents. While rivers shap...
Turbidity currents in the submarine seascape are what river flows are in terrestrial landscapes. Whi...
The majority of the huge annual sediment load of the Yellow River in China is transported by a few h...
Submarine turbidity currents create some of the largest sediment accumulations on Earth, yet there a...
Theoretical and experimental interest in the transport and deposition of sediments from rivers to oc...
During floods, the density of river water usually increases due to the increase in the concentration...
The principle transport agent in deep ocean environments are turbidity currents, avalanches of sedim...
Hsu, Tian-JianThe understanding of river-borne sediment dispersal is important for several reasons. ...
Although sea-level highstands are typically associated with sediment-starved continental shelves, hi...
Rivers (on land) and turbidity currents (in the ocean) are the most important sediment transport pro...