VARIABILITY OF THE MODERN SAND COVER ON A TIDE AND STORM DRIVEN INNERSHELF, SOUTH WELLINGTON, NEW-ZEALAND

Authors
Citation
L. Carter et K. Lewis, VARIABILITY OF THE MODERN SAND COVER ON A TIDE AND STORM DRIVEN INNERSHELF, SOUTH WELLINGTON, NEW-ZEALAND, New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 38(4), 1995, pp. 451-470
Citations number
64
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary",Geology
ISSN journal
00288306
Volume
38
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
451 - 470
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-8306(1995)38:4<451:VOTMSC>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
The embayed coast, south of Wellington, is notorious for the severity of its storms and tides. Time-series side-scan sonar and sediment surv eys, made of the bays and inner shelf over an 11-16 year period, show that the general locations of four main seabed types-(1) a modern, fin e-medium sand cover, (2) a generally megarippled, coarse sand - fine g ravel substrate, (3) a basal cobble-boulder deposit, and (4) greywacke basement-remain fairly stable despite considerable mobility at the ed ges of each deposit. The sand cover is best developed(1.5 m max. thick ness) in the larger bays centred on Wellington Harbour entrance. Here it has undergone bouts of accretion (indicated by advances of cover ed ges) that have ended in erosion (with retreat of edges). Mobility of s and is induced on a daily to annual basis by tides reinforced by south erly swell and storm-driven currents. These high-frequency events are superimposed on annular to decadal variations that probably relate to the frequency of gales and storms, and to variations in sediment suppl y caused by local earthquakes, changes in land use, and climatic cycle s. Outside the bays, on the open shelf, the combination of a more vigo rous tidal flow and reduced sediment supply mean that the sand cover i s much less extensive and more mobile. The seabed is predominantly coa rse sand - fine gravel with a megarippled surface formed by southerly swell. Tides become progressively stronger to the west, and, in the Na rrows of Cook Strait, currents are sufficiently powerful to keep sand in near-constant motion and erode the fine gravel down to underlying b oulders and rock.