Preservation of meandering river channels in uniformly aggrading channel belts

Publication date

2016

Authors

van de Lageweg, WietseORCID 0000-0001-6736-9433ISNI 0000000419435346
Schuurman, F.ISNI 0000000419494418
Cohen, K.M.ORCID 0000-0002-0095-3990ISNI 0000000114674581
van Dijk, W.M.ISNI 0000000397190623
Shimizu, Y.
Kleinhans, M. G.ORCID 0000-0002-9484-1673ISNI 0000000114640007

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Channel belt deposits from meandering river systems commonly display an internal architecture of stacked depositional features with scoured basal contacts due to channel and bedform migration across a range of scales. Recognition and correct interpretation of these bounding surfaces is essential to reconstruction of palaeochannel dimensions and to flow modelling for hydrocarbon exploration. It is therefore crucial to understand the suite of processes that form and transfer these surfaces into the fluvial sedimentary record. Here the numerical model ‘NAYS2D’ is used to simulate a highly sinuous meandering river with synthetic stratigraphic architectures that can be compared directly to the sedimentary record. Model results highlight the importance of spatial and temporal variations in channel depth and migration rate to the generation of channel and bar deposits. Addition of net uniform bed aggradation (due to excess sediment input) allows quantification of the preservation of meander morphology for a wide range of depositional conditions. The present authors found that the effect of vertical variation in scouring due to channel migration is generally orders of magnitude larger than the effect of bed aggradation. This explains the limited impact bed aggradation has on preservation of meander morphology. Moreover, lateral differences in stratigraphy within the meander belt are much larger than the stratigraphic imprint of bed aggradation. Repeatedly produced alternations of point bar growth followed by cut-off result in a vertical trend in channel and scour feature stacking. Importantly, this vertical stacking trend differs laterally within the meander belt. In the centre of the meander belt, the high reworking intensity results in many bounding surfaces and disturbed deposits. Closer to the margins, reworking is infrequent and thick deposits with a limited number of bounding surfaces are preserved. These marginal areas therefore have the highest preservation potential for complete channel deposits and are thus best suited for palaeochannel reconstruction.

Keywords

meandering river, morphodynamic modelling, preservation, stratigraphy, point-bar deposits, numerical simulation, subaqueous dunes, bed topography, cross-strata, Taverne, Earth-Surface Processes, Stratigraphy, Geology

Citation

van de Lageweg, W I, Schuurman, F, Cohen, K M, van Dijk, W M, Shimizu, Y & Kleinhans, M G 2016, 'Preservation of meandering river channels in uniformly aggrading channel belts', Sedimentology, vol. 63, no. 3, pp. 586-608. https://doi.org/10.1111/sed.12229