2.b - NILE DELTA CS LOW ENERGY Flashcards
what is lake El bullurus?
2nd largest lagoon found on the delta
saltwater and 175m deep at its deepest point
what is lake Manzala?
largest lagoon in egypt
lagoons are enclosed by sand bars
what are sand bars?
along the coast
are developed by EASTWARD LSD
what are sabkahs?
salt flats
formed behing lagoons where older lagoons have dried out, leaving flat salt plains
where are coastal dunes found (nile delta)?
developed between lakes manzala and El bullurus at Gamasa
what are crescentric bars?
at alexandria
formed by rip currents and onshore waves, with little LSD
what evidence is there that Nile delta is a low energy environment?
small waves
no erosional features like stacks or stumps etc
what landforms would you expect to find on the Nile Delta?
depositional landforms:
beaches
bars and spits
lagoons forming
salt pans rather than mudflats, due to the heat
what is a delta?
arge areas of sediment found at the mouths of many rivers
what happens when the nile floods?
the river traditionally flooded annually, and these floods deposited vast amounts of sediment onto the delta flood plains, creating incredibly fertile soils (up to 9.6m deep around Cairo)
what happens to nile sediment not deposited onto flood plains?
the sediment not being deposited on the flood plains will reach the Mediterranean Sea and be deposited due to flocculation
thus deposition is focused around the mouths of the distributaries.
key features of the burullus lake
has an elongated elliptical shape
it is separated from the mediterranean sea by a narrow sand bar covered by sand mounds and sand dunes approaching up to 3m above sea level at its NE corner
agricultural wastes have been reported to increase sedimentation in wetlands and consequently diminish the size of lagoons such as Burullus.
where do crecentric bars form?
to the east, cresentric bars form where the beaches are swash aligned, allowing rip currents to develop, which pull material out from the coastline and deposit it offshore
how have dunes developed in the nile delta?
there is also an extensive ridge of dunes which has been developed between the 2 lagoons at Gamasa beach.
the dunes are about 30km across and result from the large backshore area being present here, the onshore winds allowing for aeolian processes to take place as well as the fact that dry warm conditions mean sand can dry out and be moved.
the winds coming in from the NW are able to entrain (pick up) huge amounts of sediment as the beach is up to 20km wide.
how have coastal processes and sediment deposition combined to change the deltas morphology?
these coastal processes, combined w/ sediment deposition, have meant that traditionally the delta has been “growing”, extending out into the Mediterranean Sea, and reworked by the LSD moving eastwards/
the lagoons have, over time, been getting filled in by fine sediment which is no longer reworked by LSD