Turbidity currents, both continuous flow and surge-type, have been detected with acoustic sounders operating at 42.5, 107 and 200, kHz. The turbidity currents are associated with the discharge of mine tailing into Rupert Inlet. A linear relation is obtained between the backscattered acoustic signal at 200 kHz and the one-half power of suspended particulate concentration from 10 to 1000 mg 1⁻¹. This relation is consistent with Rayleigh scattering theory in form and (relative to a standard target) amplitude, and is used to generate a cross-sectional profile of sediment concentration in the discharge plume. Estimates of surge speeds from the acoustic records based on a universal shape for density current heads range from 30 to 120 cm s⁻¹. The excess density of one surge was estimated from the reverberation amplitude to be 0.12 g cm⁻³. The additional attenuation of sound waves by suspended particles is important in turbidity currents and may be used to estimate suspended particulate concentration. Thermal processes contribute very little to the additional attenuation by particles with the grain densities of common minerals.
A leveed submarine channel extended from the point of the tailing discharge (outfall) over the surface of the tailing deposit as early as 1974. The upper reach of this system was buried in 1978, and by late 1979 a new channel had developed. In 1976-77, the original channel consisted of: (1) a left-hooking upper reach with an average slope of 2.2°, (2) a middle reach (1° slope) with pronounced meanders (700-1100 m wavelengths) "increasing in curvature with distance downstream and (3) a
straight lower reach (0.5° slope). The cross-sectional area of the channel decreased with distance downstream, excepting an increase in the first 100-200 m, until the channel disappeared about 5.5 km from the outfall. Acoustic records of the discharge plume in bends indicate overspill from the outer bank and an upward tilt of the upper interface away from the centre of bend curvature. The interfacial slope is steeper than indicated by the cross-channel difference in levee heights. These records together with observed tidal currents suggest that the left hook in the upper reach is caused by a mechanism similar to that which has been suggested for deep-sea channels. Turbidites in gravity cores from the levees are present as layers of vertically-graded, Cu-rich and Fe-poor sand and silt, some of which have load-casted flame-structures or load-pockets at their basai contacts. These layers comprise more of the sediment column with distance down-channel, suggesting that levee-building by overbank spillage from continuous flow becomes less important, and that most of the material transported through the lower reach is carried by turbidity surges. Surge recurrence intervals of 2-5 d are obtained from the number turbidites per core and the local deposition rate. The latter ranged from 0.3-4 m yr⁻¹, as given by changes in water depth, in tailing thickness from seismic reflection surveys, and in diatom frustule abundance in the cores. A model of continuous turbidity flow in submarine channels including entrainment is applied to the Rupert Inlet channel. Results are consistent with a sediment budget based on changes in the tailing deposit volume, and with turbidity surge recurrence intervals. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:UBC/oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/23011 |
Date | January 1981 |
Creators | Hay, Alexander Edward |
Source Sets | University of British Columbia |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Text, Thesis/Dissertation |
Rights | For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. |
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