Natural processes in delta restoration: Application to the Mississippi Delta
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2011
Abstract
Restoration of river deltas involves diverting sediment and water from major channels into adjoining drowned areas, where the sediment can build new land and provide a platform for regenerating wetland ecosystems. Except for local engineered structures at the points of diversion, restoration mainly relies on natural delta-building processes. Present understanding of such processes is sufficient to provide a basis for determining the feasibility of restoration projects through quantitative estimates of land-building rates and sustainable wetland area under different scenarios of sediment supply, subsidence, and sea-level rise. We are not yet to the point of being able to predict the evolution of a restored delta in detail. Predictions of delta evolution are based on field studies of active deltas, deltas in mine-tailings ponds, experimental deltas, and countless natural experiments contained in the stratigraphic record. These studies provide input for a variety of mechanistic delta models, ranging from radially averaged formulations to more detailed models that can resolve channels, topography, and ecosystem processes. Especially exciting areas for future research include understanding the mechanisms by which deltaic channel networks self-organize, grow, and distribute sediment and nutrients over the delta surface and coupling these to ecosystem processes, especially the interplay of topography, network geometry, and ecosystem dynamics. Copyright © 2011 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Annual Review of Marine Science
First Page
67
Last Page
91
Recommended Citation
Paola, C., Twilley, R., Edmonds, D., Kim, W., Mohrig, D., Parker, G., Viparelli, E., & Voller, V. (2011). Natural processes in delta restoration: Application to the Mississippi Delta. Annual Review of Marine Science, 3, 67-91. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-marine-120709-142856