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Sediment dispersal from a typical Mediterranean flood : The Têt River, Gulf of Lions
Bourrin F., Friend P.L., Amos C.L., Manca E., Ulses C., Palanques A., Durrieu De Madron X., Thompson C.E.L.
Continental Shelf Research 28, 15 (2008) 1895-1910 - http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00519751
Article in peer-reviewed journal
Physics/Physics/Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Sediment dispersal from a typical Mediterranean flood : The Têt River, Gulf of Lions
F. Bourrin 1, 2, P.L. Friend 3, C.L. Amos 3, E. Manca 3, C. Ulses 4, A. Palanques 5, X. Durrieu De Madron 1, C.E.L. Thompson 3
1:  Centre de formation et de recherche sur l'environnement marin (CEFREM)
http://www.univ-perp.fr/CEFREM/
CNRS : UMR5110 – INSU – Université de Perpignan
Bâtiment U 52 Av Paul Alduy 66860 PERPIGNAN CEDEX
France
2:  Laboratoire d'océanographie de Villefranche (LOV)
http://www.obs-vlfr.fr
CNRS : UMR7093 – INSU – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
BP 28 06234 VILLEFRANCHE SUR MER CEDEX
France
3:  School of Ocean and Earth Science
National Oceanography Centre Southampton
National Oceanography Centre Southampton European Way Southampton SO 14 3ZH
United Kingdom
4:  Laboratoire d'aérologie (LA)
http://www.aero.obs-mip.fr/
CNRS : UMR5560 – Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées – INSU – Université Paul Sabatier [UPS] - Toulouse III
14 avenue Edouard Belin 31400 Toulouse
France
5:  Institute of Marine Sciences / Institut de Ciències del Mar [Barcelona] (ICM)
http://www.icm.csic.es/en/content/introduction-0
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
Passeig Maritim de la Barceloneta 37-49 Barcelona 08003
Spain
This paper describes an integrated study of a typical Mediterranean flood event in the Gulf of Lions. A flood with a 5-year return interval occurred in the Têt River basin and adjacent inner-shelf in the Gulf of Lions, northwest Mediterranean, during April 2004. Data were collected during this flood as part of event-response investigations of the EU-funded Eurostrataform (European Margin Strata Formation) project. Southeasterly storm winds led to a flood which directly modified the inner-shelf hydrodynamics. Sediment delivery to the coastal zone during this flood represented more than half of the mean annual discharge of the Têt River to the Gulf of Lions. This river transported a large amount of sand in suspension, representing 25% of the total suspended load, and as bedload representing 8% of the total load, during this event. Sand introduced in the nearshore was transported northwards during the peak storm and nourished a small delta. Fine sediments were separated from coarse sediments at the river mouth, and were advected southwards and seawards by the counter-clockwise general circulation. Fine-grained sediments were transported via a hypopycnal plume along the coast towards the southern tip of the Gulf of Lions and the Cap Creus canyon. The along-shore currents, which intensified from north to south of the Gulf of Lions, particularly between the Cap Creus promontory and the Cap Creus canyon, favoured the transfer of fine-grained sediments from the continental shelf of the Gulf of Lions towards the continental slope. Our results show that floods with a few-year return interval in small coastal rivers can play a significant role in the transport of sediments on microtidal continental margins and their export from the shelf through canyons.
English

Continental Shelf Research
Publisher Elsevier
ISSN 0278-4343 
international
2008
28
15
1895-1910

Flash-flood – Sediment transport – Hypopycnal river plume – Têt River – Gulf of Lions – Northwest Mediterranean