Nature Communications (Jun 2020)

Rapidly-migrating and internally-generated knickpoints can control submarine channel evolution

  • Maarten S. Heijnen,
  • Michael A. Clare,
  • Matthieu J. B. Cartigny,
  • Peter J. Talling,
  • Sophie Hage,
  • D. Gwyn Lintern,
  • Cooper Stacey,
  • Daniel R. Parsons,
  • Stephen M. Simmons,
  • Ye Chen,
  • Esther J. Sumner,
  • Justin K. Dix,
  • John E. Hughes Clarke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16861-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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The authors analyse 9 years of time-lapse surveys in Bute Inlet, British Columbia (CA), to show how an active submarine channel evolves. They show how channel evolution is controlled by fast upstream-migration of steep knickpoints, which are similar to waterfalls in rivers.