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Geologic controls on sediment distribution and transport pathways around the Chandeleur Islands, LA., USA

May 6, 2011

Geophysical surveys around the Chandeleur Islands provide the necessary data to map the thickness and distribution of the Holocene deposit associated with this barrier island system. This system rests uncomformably on St. Bernard Delta deposits of the Mississippi Delta plain and is thinnest under the central part of the island chain and thickest at the northern and southern ends. The zone of divergence in the bidirectional littoral transport system coincides with the thin central part. An estimate of northward littoral transport rate based on lithosome age and the volume of sediment that has accumulated at the northern end of the transport cell suggests the average transport rate over the life of the system is greater than present day fair-weather estimates. This difference may be attributed to changes in transport rates through the life of the system, to changes in the rate of sea-level rise or to storms playing a more dominant role than fair-weather waves in littoral transport.

Publication Year 2011
Title Geologic controls on sediment distribution and transport pathways around the Chandeleur Islands, LA., USA
Authors David Twichell, Elizabeth A. Pendleton, Wayne Baldwin, James Flocks, Michael Miner, Mark Kulp
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70156819
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center