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Novel Acoustic Method Provides First Detailed Measurements of Sediment Concentration Structure Within Submarine Turbidity Currents

Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans 2020 76 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Michael Clare, Maria Azpiroz–Zabala, Stephen M. Simmons, Ed Pope Peter J. Talling, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Matthieu Cartigny, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Maria Azpiroz–Zabala, Daniel R. Parsons, E. J. Sumner, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Daniel R. Parsons, Matthieu Cartigny, Matthieu Cartigny, Matthieu Cartigny, Matthieu Cartigny, Matthieu Cartigny, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Daniel R. Parsons, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Daniel R. Parsons, E. J. Sumner, Daniel R. Parsons, Peter J. Talling, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Peter J. Talling, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, Peter J. Talling, Daniel R. Parsons, Peter J. Talling, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Michael Clare, Cortis Cooper, Peter J. Talling, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, E. J. Sumner, Daniel R. Parsons, E. J. Sumner, Stephen M. Simmons, Ed Pope Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, E. J. Sumner, Stephen M. Simmons, Daniel R. Parsons, Peter J. Talling, Stephen M. Simmons, Stephen M. Simmons, Daniel R. Parsons, Michael Clare, Michael Clare, E. J. Sumner, Stephen M. Simmons, Maria Azpiroz–Zabala, Michael Clare, Matthieu Cartigny, Ed Pope Michael Clare, Daniel R. Parsons, Daniel R. Parsons, Stephen M. Simmons, Ed Pope

Summary

Researchers developed a novel acoustic method to measure sediment concentration profiles within submarine turbidity currents for the first time, using acoustic backscatter data to resolve the internal structure of these poorly understood deep-sea sediment transport events.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Turbidity currents transport prodigious volumes of sediment to the deep sea. But there are very few direct measurements from oceanic turbidity currents, ensuring they are poorly understood. Recent studies have used acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) to measure velocity profiles of turbidity currents. However, there were no detailed measurements of sediment concentration, which is a critical parameter because it provides the driving force and debate centers on whether flows are dilute or dense. Here we provide the most detailed measurements yet of sediment concentration in turbidity currents via a new method using dual‐frequency acoustic backscatter ADCP data. Backscatter intensity depends on size and concentration of sediment, and we disentangle these effects. This approach is used to document the internal structure of turbidity currents in Congo Canyon. Flow duration is bimodal, and some flows last for 5–10 days. All flows are mainly dilute (<10 g/L), although faster flows contain a short‐lived initial period of coarser‐grained or higher‐concentration flow within a few meters of the bed. The body of these flows tends toward a maximum speed of 0.8–1 m/s, which may indicate an equilibrium in which flow speeds suspend available sediment. Average sediment concentration and flow thickness determine the gravitational driving force, which we then compared to average velocities. This comparison suggests surprisingly low friction values, comparable to or less than those of major rivers. This new approach therefore provides fundamental insights into one of the major sediment transport processes on Earth.

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