Seabed armoring
Definition of Seabed armoring:
The formation of a top layer of coarse sediment hiding a sublayer of finer sediment from erosion.
This is the common definition for Seabed armoring, other definitions can be discussed in the article
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Seabed armoring is a ubiquitous process in coastal environments where the sediment bed contains a mixture of fine and coarse grained sediment particles (so-called graded sediment).
An erosion-resistant top layer of coarse sediment is formed when fine sediment is removed from the seabed surface by the scouring action of energetic waves. This coarse sediment top layer hides the underlying layer of finer sediments, which is therefore protected from scouring.
Wave action can produce seabed armoring also by 'inverse grading', a process called 'kinematic vertical sorting' [1]. This phenomenon has been observed, for example, in the case of wave-induced sheet flow[2]. When wave-induced interparticle collisions lift a coarse sediment particle from its position in the soil matrix, the vacated pore space is readily filled by finer particles, preventing it from bouncing back. The coarsest sediments are therefore lifted gradually to the surface leading to the formation of an armor top layer covering a sublayer of finer sediment. This armor layer inhibits suspension of the fine sediments, whilst the coarser particles are more exposed and set in motion more easily. The term 'inverse grading' points to the intuition that one would expect a layer of fine sediment at the surface rather than beneath it.
Related articles
- Coastal and marine sediments
- Shoreface profile
- Sediment deposition and erosion processes
- Sand transport
References
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