Abstract
The various bedforms occur in conjunction with bedrock-incised valleys and topographic depressions filled with transgressive sediment and bounded laterally by prominent rocky outcrops. These sediment sources are siphoned and mobilised by the Agulhas Current to create the contemporary shelf bedforms. Mechanisms of bedform development are associated with the interplay between the loci of sediment supply and associated grain size on the one hand and the current velocity and pathway of the Agulhas Current on the other.
Sediment ribbons form parallel to the flow path of the Agulhas Current in narrow or broad forms that can be differentiated primarily by sediment grain size. With increased sediment availability from nearby bedrock-bound depocenters these transition along shelf to 2D dunes. A cross-shelf transition to 3D dunes on the outer shelf is marked by increased current velocity, grain size and decreased sediment availability outside of rock-bound depocenters. Rock outcrops affect current velocity and flow paths sufficiently to favour localised deposition over sediment stripping from the shelf. Comet mark forms develop from interactions between availability of finer sediment and perturbations of current flow paths by rock outcrops. This creates conditions that favour localised sediment scouring over deposition.
With variability in sediment size, grain size and current flow, dunes fluctuate between active (sharp crested), inert (round crested) and degraded (flat crested) states. A lack of available sediment to replenish outer shelf dunes sees prolonged stasis, eventual dune splitting and breakdown under progressive current influence. Mid-shelf dunes have a greater capacity to recover from periods of stasis and short-term degradation due to greater availability of sediment.
Dune migration rates are slower than previous regional estimates. Reasons for this are inconclusive and may be multifaceted. Possible reasons include inertial constraints, prolonged downcurrent reformation periods and longer dune relaxation associated with coarser grain sizes and a paucity of sediment on the outer shelf coupled with the Agulhas Current core migrating further in and offshore. This may explain the stability of the large barchan dunes and reduced movement of other sharp crested dunes relative to the regional migration rates.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 105159 |
| Pages (from-to) | 1-17 |
| Number of pages | 17 |
| Journal | Continental Shelf Research |
| Volume | 272 |
| Early online date | 25 Nov 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published (in print/issue) - 30 Jan 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
Funding
Funding Information: We acknowledge those responsible for the data collection from one of southern Africa's most treacherous coastlines. In this respect, we sincerely thanks Dr Peter Ramsay and Douglas Slogrove who collected much of the side scan sonar from small day boats and rubber ducks. We acknowledge Sea Shadow for permission to publish the multibeam and backscatter data. SM acknowledges an MSc scholarship from the National Research Foundation . We are grateful for the thoughtful and exceptionally thorough reviews of Dr. John Goff and two anonymous reviewers which helped improve the manuscript.
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 14 Life Below Water
Keywords
- Agulhas current
- Shelf bedforms
- Antecedent geology
- Western boundary flows
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