Advanced Search

Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships[J]. Acta Sedimentologica Sinica, 2013, 31(05): 845-855.
Citation: Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships[J]. Acta Sedimentologica Sinica, 2013, 31(05): 845-855.

Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships

  • Publish Date: 2013-10-10
  • The shallow marine regions consisting of the Bohai, Yellow and East China Seas represent a typical wide continental shelf environment with abundant terrestrial sediment supply. Here, a variety of sedimentary records have been formed during the Holocene period. The Holocene sedimentary systems developed here have unique characteristics in terms of spatial distribution, material composition, Sedimentation  rate and the timing of accumulation, which are related to active sediment transport processes induced by tides, shelf circulations and sediment gravity flow. The sedimentary records thus formed tend to be high resolution slices, i.e., each record has a resolution of <102 years and covers a part of the Holocene period. In the field of process-product relationship study, the mid-Holocene coastal deposits on the Jiangsu coast, the early to middle Holocene sequences of the Hangzhou Bay, the Holocene mud deposits off the Zhejiang-Fujian coasts and theother mud areas over the region are of importance. These systems may be understood by identifying the material supply (from both sea bed reworking during the sea level rise event and river discharges), transport-accumulation processes, the formation of the sediment sequences and the future evolution of the sedimentary systems, for which numerical modeling becomes increasingly important.
  • 加载中
通讯作者: 陈斌, bchen63@163.com
  • 1. 

    沈阳化工大学材料科学与工程学院 沈阳 110142

  1. 本站搜索
  2. 百度学术搜索
  3. 万方数据库搜索
  4. CNKI搜索

Article Metrics

Article views(2098) PDF downloads(1564) Cited by()

Proportional views
Related
Publishing history
  • Published:  2013-10-10

Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships

Abstract: The shallow marine regions consisting of the Bohai, Yellow and East China Seas represent a typical wide continental shelf environment with abundant terrestrial sediment supply. Here, a variety of sedimentary records have been formed during the Holocene period. The Holocene sedimentary systems developed here have unique characteristics in terms of spatial distribution, material composition, Sedimentation  rate and the timing of accumulation, which are related to active sediment transport processes induced by tides, shelf circulations and sediment gravity flow. The sedimentary records thus formed tend to be high resolution slices, i.e., each record has a resolution of <102 years and covers a part of the Holocene period. In the field of process-product relationship study, the mid-Holocene coastal deposits on the Jiangsu coast, the early to middle Holocene sequences of the Hangzhou Bay, the Holocene mud deposits off the Zhejiang-Fujian coasts and theother mud areas over the region are of importance. These systems may be understood by identifying the material supply (from both sea bed reworking during the sea level rise event and river discharges), transport-accumulation processes, the formation of the sediment sequences and the future evolution of the sedimentary systems, for which numerical modeling becomes increasingly important.

Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships[J]. Acta Sedimentologica Sinica, 2013, 31(05): 845-855.
Citation: Holocene Sedimentary Systems over the Bohai, Yellow and East  China Sea Region: Recent Progress in the Study of Process-Product Relationships[J]. Acta Sedimentologica Sinica, 2013, 31(05): 845-855.

Catalog

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return