River Delta Morphotypes Emerge From Multiscale Characterization of Shorelines

L. Vulis*, A. Tejedor*, H. Ma, J. H. Nienhuis, C. M. Broaddus, J. Brown, D. A. Edmonds, J. C. Rowland, E. Foufoula‐Georgiou

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Delta shoreline structure has long been hypothesized to encode information on the relative influence of fluvial, wave, and tidal processes on delta formation and evolution. We introduce here a novel multiscale characterization of shorelines by defining three process-informed morphological metrics. We show that this characterization yields self-emerging classes of morphologically similar deltas, that is, delta morphotypes, and also predicts the dominant forcing of each morphotype. Then we show that the dominant forcings inferred from shoreline structure generally align with those estimated via relative sediment fluxes, while positing that misalignments arise from spatiotemporal heterogeneity in deltaic sediment fluxes not captured in their estimates. The proposed framework for shoreline characterization advances our quantitative understanding of how shoreline features reflect delta forcings, and may aid in deciphering paleoclimate from images of ancient deposits and projecting delta morphologic response to changes in sediment fluxes.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2022GL102684
Number of pages10
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume50
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Apr 2023

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