Bedforms and sedimentary structures related to supercritical flows in glacigenic settings

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  • University of Vienna
  • Utrecht University
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Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1539-1579
Number of pages41
JournalSedimentology
Volume68
Issue number4
Early online date29 Jun 2020
Publication statusPublished - 24 May 2021

Abstract

Upper-flow-regime bedforms, including upper-stage-plane beds, antidunes, chutes-and-pools and cyclic steps, are ubiquitous in glacigenic depositional environments characterized by abundant meltwater discharge and sediment supply. In this study, the depositional record of Froude near-critical and supercritical flows in glacigenic settings is reviewed, and similarities and differences between different depositional environments are discussed. Upper-flow-regime bedforms may occur in subglacial, subaerial and subaqueous environments, recording deposition by free-surface flows and submerged density flows. Although individual bedform types are generally not indicative of any specific depositional environment, some observed trends are similar to those documented in non-glacigenic settings. Important parameters for bedform evolution that differ between depositional environments include flow confinement, bed slope, aggradation rate and grain size. Cyclic-step deposits are more common in confined settings, like channels or incised valleys, or steep slopes of coarse-grained deltas. Antidune deposits prevail in unconfined settings and on more gentle slopes, like glacifluvial fans, sand-rich delta slopes or subaqueous (ice-contact) fans. At low aggradation rates, only the basal portions of bedforms are preserved, such as scour fills related to the hydraulic-jump zone of cyclic steps or antidune-wave breaking, which are common in glacifluvial systems and during glacial lake-outburst floods and (related) lake-level falls. Higher aggradation rates result in increased preservation potential, possibly leading to the preservation of complete bedforms. Such conditions are met in sediment-laden jökulhlaups and subaqueous proglacial environments characterized by expanding density flows. Coarser-grained sediment leads to steeper bedform profiles and highly scoured facies architectures, while finer-grained deposits display less steep bedform architectures. Such differences are in part related to stronger flows, faster settling of coarse clasts, and more rapid breaking of antidune waves or hydraulic-jump formation over hydraulically rough beds.

Keywords

    Antidune, chute-and-pool, cyclic step, glacifluvial delta, ice-contact fan, jökulhlaup

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Cite this

Bedforms and sedimentary structures related to supercritical flows in glacigenic settings. / Lang, Jörg; Le Heron, Daniel P.; Van den Berg, Jan H. et al.
In: Sedimentology, Vol. 68, No. 4, 24.05.2021, p. 1539-1579.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Lang J, Le Heron DP, Van den Berg JH, Winsemann J. Bedforms and sedimentary structures related to supercritical flows in glacigenic settings. Sedimentology. 2021 May 24;68(4):1539-1579. Epub 2020 Jun 29. doi: 10.1111/sed.12776
Lang, Jörg ; Le Heron, Daniel P. ; Van den Berg, Jan H. et al. / Bedforms and sedimentary structures related to supercritical flows in glacigenic settings. In: Sedimentology. 2021 ; Vol. 68, No. 4. pp. 1539-1579.
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