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Submarine sedimentary features on a fjord delta front, Queen Inlet, Glacier Bay, Alaska

January 1, 1992

Side-scan sonar images provide a view of an actively changing delta front in a marine outwash fjord in Glacier Bay, Alaska. Numerous interconnected gullies and chute-like small channels form paths for the transport of sand and coarse silt from the braided glacial outwash streams on the delta plain to the sinuous turbidity-current channels incised into the fjord floor. These turbidity-current channels carry coarse sediment through the fjord and into the adjoining glacial trunk valley. Several sedimentary processes affect the development of this delta front: overflow plumes deposit fine sediment; sediment gravity flows result from episodic delivery of large loads of coarse sediment; and mass movement may be triggered by earthquakes and, more regularly, by spring-tidal drawdown or hydraulic loading.

Publication Year 1992
Title Submarine sedimentary features on a fjord delta front, Queen Inlet, Glacier Bay, Alaska
DOI 10.1139/e92-049
Authors Paul R. Carlson, Ross D. Powell, Andrew C. Phillips
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Index ID 70017103
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center