Publication Date:
2019-03-20
Description:
River deltas are sites of sediment accumulation along the coastline that form critical biological habitats, host megacities, and contain significant quantities of hydrocarbons. Despite their importance, we do not know which factors most significantly promote sediment accumulation and dominate delta formation. To investigate this issue, we present a global dataset of 5,399 coastal rivers and data on eight environmental variables. Of these rivers, 40 % (n = 2,174 deltas) have geomorphic deltas, defined either by a protrusion from the regional shoreline, a distributary channel network, or both. Globally, coastlines average one delta for every ~ 300 km of shoreline, but there are hotspots of delta formation. For example, in Southeast Asia there is one delta per 100 km of shoreline. Our analysis shows that the likelihood of a river to form a delta increases with increasing water discharge, sediment discharge, and drainage basin area. On the other hand, delta likelihood decreases with increasing wave height and tidal range. Delta likelihood has a non-monotonic relationship with receiving basin slope: it decreases with steeper slopes but increases for slopes 〉 0.006. This relationship likely reflects different controls on delta formation on active versus passive margins. Sediment concentration and recent sea-level change do not affect delta likelihood. A logistic regression shows that water discharge, sediment discharge, wave height, and tidal range are most important for delta formation. The logistic regression correctly predicts delta formation 75 % of the time. Our global analysis illustrates that delta formation and morphology represent a balance between constructive and destructive forces, and this framework may help predict tipping points where deltas rapidly shift morphologies.
Electronic ISSN:
2196-6338
Topics:
Geosciences
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