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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Michael Z. Li (Geological Survey of Canada) , Christopher R. Sherwood (US Geological Survey) , Philip R. Hill (Natural Resources Canada)Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell Dimensions: Width: 22.70cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 28.50cm Weight: 1.470kg ISBN: 9781444350821ISBN 10: 144435082 Pages: 440 Publication Date: 09 February 2012 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsPreface Part 1: Sediments and morphology in shelf and coastal systems Optimal use of multibeam technology in the study of shelf morphodynamics John E. Hughes Clarke Palaeogeographic reconstruction of Hecate Strait British Columbia: changing sea levels and sedimentary processes reshape a glaciated shelf J. Vaughn Barrie and Kim W. Conway Changes in submarine channel morphology and slope sedimentation patterns from repeat multibeam surveys in the Fraser River delta, western Canada Philip R. Hill Recent sedimentary processes in the Cap de Creus canyon head and adjacent continental shelf, NE Spain: evidence from multibeam bathymetry, sub-bottom profiles and coring A. García-García, T. Schoolmeester, D. Orange, A. Calafat, J. Fabres, E. Grossman, M. Field, T. Lorenson, M. Levey and M. Sansoucy Geology metrics for predicting shoreline change using seabed and sub-bottom observations from the surf zone and nearshore Jesse E. McNinch and Jennifer L. Miselis Re-examination of sand ridges on the middle and outer New Jersey shelf based on combined analysis of multibeam bathymetry and backscatter, seafloor grab samples and chirp seismic data John A. Goff and Catherine S. Duncan Sedimentary facies of shoreface-connected sand ridges off the East Frisian barrier-island coast, southern North Sea: climatic controls and preservation potential Chang Soo Son, Burghard W. Flemming and Tae Soo Chang Part 2: Sediment transport processes, sedimentation and modelling Recent advances in understanding continental shelf sediment transport L.D. Wright Recent advances in instrumentation used to study sediment transport Jon J. Williams Seabed disturbance and bedform distribution and mobility on the storm-dominated Sable Island Bank, Scotian Shelf Michael Z. Li, Edward L. King and Robert H. Prescott Temporal variability, migration rates and preservation potential of subaqueous dune fields generated in the Agulhas Current on the southeast African continental shelf Burghard W. Flemming and Alexander Bartholomä Measurement of bedload transport in a coastal sea using repeat swath bathymetry surveys: assessing bedload formulae using sand dune migration Garret P. Duffy and John E. Hughes-Clarke Analyzing bedforms mapped using multibeam sonar to determine regional bedload sediment transport patterns in the San Francisco Bay coastal system Patrick L. Barnard, Li Erikson, David M. Rubin, Pete Dartnell and Rikk G. Kvitek Sediment transport on continental shelves: storm bed formation and preservation in heterogeneous sediments T. R. Keen, R. L. Slingerland, S. J. Bentley, Y. Furukawa, W. J. Teague and J. D. Dykes Tidal influence on the transport of suspended matter in the southwestern Yellow Sea at 6 ka Katsuto Uehara and Yoshiki Saito Origin, transport processes and distribution pattern of modern sediments in the Yellow Sea Xuefa Shi, Yanguang Liu, Zhihua Chen, Jianwei Wei, Sulan Ge, Kunshan Wang, Guoqing Wang, Shouye Yang, Shuqing Qiao, Deling Cai, Zhenbo Cheng, Wenrui Bu and Hi-Ii Yi Seasonal and spatial variation in suspended sediment characteristics off the Changjiang estuary Guoqing Wang, Xuefa Shi, Yanguang Liu, Xisheng Fang and Gang Yang Factors controlling downward fluxes of particulate matter in glacier-contact and non-glacier contact settings in a subpolar fjord (Billefjorden, Svalbard) Witold Szczuciński and Marek Zajączkowski Part 3: Application and management On seabed disturbance, marine ecological succession and applications for environmental management: a physical sedimentological perspective Peter T. Harris Benthic habitat mapping from seabed acoustic surveys: do implicit assumptions hold? Vladimir E. Kostylev List of Reviewers IndexReviewsThe references are up-to-date and largely accessible. Imust congratulate the ed-itors, authors and publisher for thisexcellent work and for the affordable price, although a paperbackvolume would possibly have been more handsome. (Geologos, 1 September 2013) “The references are up-to-date and largely accessible. I must congratulate the editors, authors and publisher for this excellent work and for the affordable price, although a paperback volume would possibly have been more handsome.” (Geologos, 1 September 2013) The references are up-to-date and largely accessible. I must congratulate the ed-itors, authors and publisher for this excellent work and for the affordable price, although a paperback volume would possibly have been more handsome. ( Geologos , 1 September 2013) Author InformationMichael Li is a research scientist at the Atlantic branch of the Geological Survey of Canada. After obtaining degrees from Ocean University of China and Oregon State University, Michael has worked in and published on the coastal and shelf systems of China, United States, and Canada. His current research interests include boundary layer dynamics and sediment transport processes through in situ measurements of instrumented seabed landers, offshore geohazards and mobility of large-scale bedforms through multibeam and sidescan surveys and sampling, physical and numerical models of hydrodynamics and sediment transport processes on continental shelves and in coastal environments. Chris Sherwood is a research oceanographer with the U. S. Geologcal Survey and works at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center. Dr. Sherwood studied at Bowdoin College and the University of Washington. Before joining the USGS, he worked for the marine research division of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industry Research Organisation in Hobart, Australia. His research is focused on development of open-source models for sediment transport in coastal ocean environment, and on field measurements to evaluate the models. Phil Hill is a research scientist with the Geological Suvey of Canada. Since graduating with degrees from the University of Oxford and Dalhousie University, he has practiced marine geology in government, universities and the private sector. He has published on marine geology and sedimentology all around Canada, including the east and west coasts, the Beaufort Sea and Hudson Bay. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |