Cart
Free Shipping in Australia
Proud to be B-Corp

Fluvial-Tidal Sedimentology Summary

Fluvial-Tidal Sedimentology: Volume 68 by Volume editor Philip J Ashworth (University of Brighton, UK)

Fluvial-Tidal Sedimentology provides information on the Tidal-Fluvial Transition', the transition zone between river and tidal environments, and includes contributions that address some of the most fundamental research questions, including how the morphology of the tidal-fluvial transition zone evolves over short (days) and long (decadal) time periods and for different tidal and fluvial regimes, the structure of the river flow as it varies in its magnitude over tidal currents and how this changes at the mixing interface between fresh and saline water and at the turbidity maximum, the role of suspended sediment in controlling bathymetric change and bar growth and the role of fine-grained sediment (muds and flocs), whether it is possible to differentiate between fluvial and tidally influenced bedforms as preserved in bars and within the adjacent floodplain and what are the diagnostic sedimentary facies of tidal-fluvial deposits and how are these different from pure fluvial and tidal deposits, amongst other topics. The book presents the latest research on the processes and deposits of the tidal-fluvial transition, documenting recent major field programs that have quantified the flow, sediment transport, and bed morphology in tidal-fluvial zones. It uses description of contemporary environments and ancient outcrop analogues to characterize the facies change through the tidal-fluvial transition.

Table of Contents

PART 1 CONTEXT CHAPTER 1 Deciphering the Relative Importance of Fluvial and Tidal Processes in the FluvialMarine Transition R.W. Dalrymple, C.E. Kurcinka, B.V.J. Jablonski, A.A. Ichaso, D.A. Mackay PART 2 MODERN CHAPTER 2 Estuarine Turbidity Maxima Revisited: Instrumental Approaches, Remote Sensing, Modeling Studies, and New Directions David A. Jay, Stefan A. Talke, Austin Hudson, Michael Twardowski CHAPTER 3 Sedimentological Trends Across the TidalFluvial Transition, Fraser River, Canada: A Review and Some Broader Implications Shahin E. Dashtgard, Andrew D. La Croix CHAPTER 4 Three-Dimensional Meander Bend Flow Within the Tidally Influenced Fluvial Zone Claire E. Keevil, Daniel R. Parsons, Gareth M. Keevil, Matthew Ainsley CHAPTER 5 Sedimentology of a Tidal Point-Bar Within the FluvialTidal Transition: River Severn Estuary, UK Paul A. Carling, Chloe C. Chateau, Dale A. Leckie, Catherine T. Langdon, Robert G. Scaife, Daniel R. Parsons PART 3 ANCIENT CHAPTER 6 Mid to Late Holocene Geomorphological and Sedimentological Evolution of the FluvialTidal Zone: Lower Columbia River, WA/OR, USA E.W. Prokocki, J.L. Best, P.J. Ashworth, D.R. Parsons, G.H. Sambrook Smith, A. Nicholas, C.J. Simpson, H. Wang, S.D. Sandbach, C. Keevil CHAPTER 7 Palaeo-Orinoco (Pliocene) Channels on the Tide-Dominated Morne LEnfer Delta Lobes and Estuaries, SW Trinidad Si Chen, Ronald J. Steel, Cornel Olariu CHAPTER 8 The Ichnology of the FluvialTidal Transition: Interplay of Ecologic and Evolutionary Controls Davinia Diez-Canseco, Luis A. Buatois, M. Gabriela Mangano, Williams Rodriguez, Euridice Solorzano CHAPTER 9 A Reappraisal of Large, Heterolithic Channel Fills in the Upper Permian Rangal Coal Measures of the Bowen Basin, Queensland, Australia: The Case for Tidal Influence Christopher R. Fielding CHAPTER 10 Facies and Architecture of Unusual FluvialTidal Channels with Inclined Heterolithic Strata: Campanian Neslen Formation, Utah, USA Cornel Olariu, Ronald J. Steel, Mariana I. Olariu, Kyungsik Choi CHAPTER 11 Geologic Reservoir Characterization of Carboniferous Fluvio-Tidal Deposits of the Illinois Basin, USA Nathan D. Webb, Beverly Seyler, John P. Grube CHAPTER 12 Fluvial to Tidal Transition Zone Facies in the McMurray Formation (Christina River, Alberta, Canada), with Emphasis on the Reflection of Flow Intensity in Bottomset Architecture A.W. Martinius, B.V.J. Jablonski, M. Fustic, R. Strobl, J.H. Van den Berg PART 4 RESOURCES CHAPTER 13 Recognition and Prediction of Petroleum Reservoirs in the Fluvial/Tidal Transition Howard Feldman, Timothy Demko CHAPTER 14 Characterizing Alluvial Architecture of Point Bars within the McMurray Formation, Alberta, Canada, for Improved Bitumen Resource Prediction and Recovery David Moreton, B. Joan Carter CHAPTER 15 The Cretaceous McMurray Oil Sands, Alberta, Canada: A World-Class, Tidally Influenced FluvialEstuarine SystemAn Alberta Government Perspective Frances J. Hein

Additional information

NPB9780444635297
9780444635297
0444635297
Fluvial-Tidal Sedimentology: Volume 68 by Volume editor Philip J Ashworth (University of Brighton, UK)
New
Hardback
Elsevier Science & Technology
2015-11-25
656
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Fluvial-Tidal Sedimentology