Northern Gulf of Mexico (NGOM) Ecosystem Change and Hazard Susceptibility

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Completed Subtask: Investigations of Millenial-Scale Forcing on Stratigraphic and Sedimentary Response to Latest Quaternary of the Central Mississippi River Delta Plain

Subtask Leader: Mark Kulp - Pontchartrain Institute for Environmental Sciences (PIES), University of New Orleans, Louisiana

Subtask Aim

The relationship between stratigraphic and sedimentary characteristics of strata within large deltaic depocenters will provide important contributions towards understanding temporal variations in sediment supply, sea-level change, and substrate subsidence. Data of these types also simultaneously provide the opportunity to understand how coastal depositional systems respond to allochthonous and authochothonous forcing factors such as sediment supply and sea-level change. An array of research has shown that during the latest Quaternary the NGOM region has been affected by relative sea-level change and variable sediment supply as the Earth's climate transitioned from glacial conditions to interglacial conditions similar to those that prevail today.

In this sense, the shallow Mississippi River delta system, and its extant geologic and geomorphic architecture, has recorded portions of the change and the overall evolution that has occurred along the north-central Gulf of Mexico since the initial sea-level rise that accompanied the most recent deglaciation. The magnitude and frequency of past changes in environmental forcing factors (such as sea-level change) and associated depositional responses (such as frequency of avulsions) provides an opportunity to better understand modern ecosystem response to ongoing and anticipated future changes arising from similarly operating modern variables.

Although numerous studies within the last 100 years have addressed much of the NGOM shallow deltaic and coastal geology, ongoing questions exist regarding the rates, magnitudes and direction of late Quaternary sea-level change. Specifically, significant changes in the texture of sediments supplied to the Mississippi River delta depocenter may have occurred, and the chronology and distribution of marine flooding and successive progradation following the late Wisconsin sea-level lowstand is poorly defined. In general, there has been a relative lack of information that associates the lower alluvial valley and early Holocene deltaic plain with more updip stratigraphy. Such information would be the basis for developing a truly regional framework within which to gauge the relative role of aforementioned variables in coastal-deltaic systems.

Subtask Activities

The primary goal of this subtask is to investigate the latest Quaternary sedimentary systems of the delta plain and the depositionally linked alluvial valley. The final product of this effort will be an evaluation of the system evolution within spatially and temporally variable regimes of tectonic motion, drainage basin maturation, relative sea-level change and sediment supply.

Subtask Publications

Kulp, M.A., Fitzgerald, D.M., Georgiou, I.Y., Miner, M.D., and Penland, S., 2007, The demise of the Chandeleur Islands in southern Louisiana: not yet! [abstract]: Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, v. 39, no. 6, p. 69.
Kulp, M., Tornqvist, T., and Blum, M., 2008, Patterns and causes of Mississippi River delta plain subsidence as recorded by varied approaches to measurement [abstract], in Baton Rouge Geological Society Natural and Anthropogenic Subsidence Impacts on Louisiana Coasts Symposium, Baton Rouge, LA, January 24, 2008, Baton Rouge Geological Society, p. 13.
Williams, S.J., Kulp, M., Penland, S., Kindinger, J.L., and Flocks, J.G., expected 2007, Mississippi River Delta Plain, Louisiana coast and inner shelf: Holocene geologic framework and processes, chapter in Holmes, C. (ed.), The Gulf of Mexico- Its Origin (History, Archaeology and Geology), Texas A&M Press, in press
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