Abstract
The influence of sand and mud transport on the morphological behaviour of a short tidal basin is investigated in this paper. For this purpose, a morphological model is applied in which sand and mud transport are included and the temporal and spatial bed composition variations are taken into account. Initially, the morphological development shows a sand wave near the entrance of the basin and a mud deposition wave more landward. A quasi equilibrium bed level profile is found after a long period (order century) with a sandy bed surface over almost the entire basin and only a small muddy area near the landward end. The dimensionless ratio between the deposition and erosion flux turns out to be a crucial parameter for the understanding of the observed behaviour. Comparison with previous studies on short tidal basins for sand indicates only that the presence of mud in a combined sand mud model does not change the equilibrium bed level profile considerably for the applied parameter settings herein, but drastically decreases the morphological time scale. Comparison between model results and field data of the Wadden Sea suggests that the obtained bed level and bed composition profile are realistic, indicating that the process-based sand mud model is a first step towards a better understanding of sand mud distributions in tidal basins.
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This research was supported under project no. DCT.4895 by the Technology Foundation STW, applied science division of NWO and the technology programme of the Ministry of Economic Affairs.
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van Ledden, M., Wang, ZB., Winterwerp, H. et al. Sand–mud morphodynamics in a short tidal basin. Ocean Dynamics 54, 385–391 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10236-003-0050-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10236-003-0050-y