TY - DATA
T1 - Replication Data for: Spatially varying environmental properties controlling observed sand wave morphology, Part 2
PY - 2020/01/01
AU - J.M. (John) Damen
AU - A.G.P. (Thaïenne) van Dijk
AU - S.J.M.H. (Suzanne) Hulscher
UR - https://data.4tu.nl/articles/dataset/Replication_Data_for_Spatially_varying_environmental_properties_controlling_observed_sand_wave_morphology_Part_2/12712511/1
DO - 10.4121/uuid:ab110b62-4cf0-4c06-a2ce-a0ef2eaf750a
KW - Bedforms
KW - Earth and Environmental Sciences
KW - Marine sediments
KW - Netherlands Continental Shelf
KW - Sand waves
KW - Spatial differences
N2 - Dataset belonging to the publication: Spatially Varying Environmental Properties Controlling Observed Sand Wave Morphology (2017-06-21).
Sand wave morphology and dynamics on continental shelves vary substantially and we hypothesize that these spatial variations depend on local bed properties and hydrodynamic characteristics. To date, process-based modelling studies have not been able to simulate realistic equilibrium sand wave heights and empirical studies are mostly limited to case studies. In order to explain the spatial variation in the morphology of equilibrium sand waves on continental shelves with processes and local bed conditions, a large-scale investigation is required. In this paper, we use high-resolution multibeam echo soundings, hydrodynamic models and databases and sedimentary data for the analysis of respectively sand wave shape characteristics and the comparison to hydrodynamic and sedimentary characteristics for the Netherlands Continental Shelf. The results are quantified lengths, heights and asymmetry of all sand waves in the Dutch part of the North Sea. Furthermore, we show that suspended sediment is a dominant factor in explaining sand wave length, height and asymmetry. Full results of shape characteristics of all sand waves on the Netherlands Continental Shelf together with the tidal velocity, water depth, surface wave height and median grain size are provided in a repository with this paper (URL). These results are highly valuable for applied offshore engineering projects and to modellers for validating their morphodynamic model results.
ER -