River deltas worldwide are currently under threat of drowning and destruction by sea-level rise, subsidence, and oceanic storms, highlighting the need to quantify their growth processes. Deltas are built through construction of sediment lobes, and emerging theories suggest that the size of delta lobes scales with backwater hydrodynamics, but these ideas are difficult to test on natural deltas that evolve slowly. We show results of the first laboratory delta built through successive deposition of lobes that maintain a constant size. We show that the characteristic size of delta lobes emerges because of a preferential avulsion node—the location where the river course periodically and abruptly shifts—that remains fixed spatially relative to th...
Predictions of a delta's morphology, facies, and stratigraphy are typically derived from its relativ...
Channel avulsions on river deltas are the primary means to distribute sediment and build land at the...
I gratefully acknowledge a previous honorary position at the University of Aberdeen, and thank John ...
River deltas are built by cycles of lobe growth and abrupt channel shifts, or avulsions, that occur ...
River deltas grow in large part through repeated cycles of lobe construction and channel avulsion. U...
River delta complexes are built in part through repeated river-channel avulsions, which often occur ...
River deltas grow by repeating cycles of lobe development punctuated by channel avulsions, so that o...
We investigate the interaction of fluvial and non-fluvial sedimentation on the channel morphology an...
A mechanistic understanding of river avulsion location and frequency is needed to predict the growth...
Understanding how deltas respond to changing sea level is crucial as deltas provide important ecosys...
River deltas grow through repeated lobe‐scale avulsions, which often occur at a location that correl...
Erosional surfaces set the architecture of fluvio-deltaic stratigraphy, and they have classically be...
River deltas rank among the most economically and ecologically valuable environments on Earth. Even ...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2013. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Reduced sediment supply and rising sea levels are driving land submergence on deltas worldwide, moti...
Predictions of a delta's morphology, facies, and stratigraphy are typically derived from its relativ...
Channel avulsions on river deltas are the primary means to distribute sediment and build land at the...
I gratefully acknowledge a previous honorary position at the University of Aberdeen, and thank John ...
River deltas are built by cycles of lobe growth and abrupt channel shifts, or avulsions, that occur ...
River deltas grow in large part through repeated cycles of lobe construction and channel avulsion. U...
River delta complexes are built in part through repeated river-channel avulsions, which often occur ...
River deltas grow by repeating cycles of lobe development punctuated by channel avulsions, so that o...
We investigate the interaction of fluvial and non-fluvial sedimentation on the channel morphology an...
A mechanistic understanding of river avulsion location and frequency is needed to predict the growth...
Understanding how deltas respond to changing sea level is crucial as deltas provide important ecosys...
River deltas grow through repeated lobe‐scale avulsions, which often occur at a location that correl...
Erosional surfaces set the architecture of fluvio-deltaic stratigraphy, and they have classically be...
River deltas rank among the most economically and ecologically valuable environments on Earth. Even ...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2013. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Reduced sediment supply and rising sea levels are driving land submergence on deltas worldwide, moti...
Predictions of a delta's morphology, facies, and stratigraphy are typically derived from its relativ...
Channel avulsions on river deltas are the primary means to distribute sediment and build land at the...
I gratefully acknowledge a previous honorary position at the University of Aberdeen, and thank John ...