Dictionary Definition
sediment n : matter deposited by some natural
process [syn: deposit]
Verb
1 deposit as a sediment
2 settle as sediment
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈsɛdɪmənt/
Noun
- A collection of small particles, particularly dirt,
that precipitates
from a river or other
body
of water.
- The Nile delta is composed of sediment that was washed down and deposited at the mouth of the river.
Related terms
Translations
Verb
- To deposit material as a sediment
- To be deposited as a sediment
Extensive Definition
Sediment is any particulate matter that can be
transported by fluid flow
and which eventually is deposited as a layer of solid particles on
the bed or bottom of a body of water or other liquid. Sedimentation
is the deposition by settling of a suspended
material.
Sediments are also transported by wind (aeolian
processes) and glaciers. Desert sand dunes and
loess are examples of
aeolian transport and deposition. Glacial moraine deposits and till are ice transported sediments.
Simple gravitational collapse also creates sediments such as talus
and mountainslide deposits as well as karst
collapse features. Each sediment type has different settling
velocities, depending on size, volume, density, and shape.
Seas, oceans, and lakes accumulate sediment over
time. These materials can be terrestrial (deposited on the land) or
marine (deposited in the ocean); terrigenous deposits originate on
land, but may be deposited in either terrestrial, marine, or
lacustrine (lake) environments. Deposited sediments are the source
of sedimentary
rocks, which can contain fossils of the inhabitants of the
body of water that were, upon death, covered by accumulating
sediment. Lake bed sediments that have not solidified into rock can
be used to determine past climatic conditions.
Sediment transport
Rivers and streams
For a fluid to begin transporting sediment, the bed shear stress exerted by the fluid must exceed the critical shear stress of the bed. Once this critical stress is exceeded, the way in which the sediment is transported depends on the characteristics of the sediment and the fluid. If a fluid, such as water, is flowing, it can carry suspended particles. The settling velocity is the minimum velocity a flow must have in order to transport, rather than deposit, sediments, and (for a dilute suspension) is given by Stokes' Law:- w=\frac
where w is the settling velocity, ρ is
density (the subscripts p and f indicate particle and fluid
respectively), g is the acceleration due to gravity, r is the
radius of the particle and μ is the dynamic viscosity of the
fluid. This equation is only valid for particle Reynold's
numbers <1.
If the flow velocity is greater than the settling
velocity, sediment will be transported downstream as suspended
load. As there will always be a range of different particle sizes
in the flow, some will have sufficiently large diameters that they
settle on the river or stream bed, but still move downstream. This
is known as bed load and the particles are transported via such
mechanisms as saltation (jumping up into the flow, being
transported a short distance then settling again), rolling and
sliding. Saltation marks are often preserved in solid rocks and can
be used to estimate the flow rate of the rivers that originally
deposited the sediments.
The overall balance between sediment in transport
and sediment being deposited on the bed is given by the Exner
equation. This equation is important in that changes in flow
depth and slope (see: depth-slope
product) will change the basal shear
stress, thus causing local areas of erosion and deposition.
More large-scale changes such as dam emplacement and removal and
sea-level variation change Base level and
cause the river to either pool (and deposit its entire load) or
rapidly erode into its underlying substrate.
Early applications of mathematical
modeling of sediment transport in riverine systems were
observed in the late 1970s. One such application was conducted by
Santa Cruz County for the San
Lorenzo River to study erosion from surface
runoff and the resulting turbidity and bedload
transport to downstream reaches. This work was used to analyze
effects of land use practices in this drainage basin.
One of the main causes of riverine sediment load
siltation stems from slash and
burn treatment of tropical forests. When the ground surface
is stripped of vegetation and then seared of all living organisms,
the upper soils are vulnerable to both wind and water erosion. In a
number of regions of the earth, entire sectors of a country have
been rendered erosive; for example, on the Madagascar high
central plateau,
comprising approximately ten percent of that country's land area,
virtually the entire landscape is sterile of vegetation, with gully
erosive furrows typically in excess of 50 meters deep and one
kilometer wide. Shifting
cultivation is a farming system which sometimes incorporates
the slash and
burn method in some regions of the world. The resulting
sediment load in rivers flowing to the west is ongoing, with most
rivers a dark red brown colour, also leading to massive fish
kills.
Surface runoff
Surface
runoff water can pick up soil particles and transport them in
overland flow for deposition at a lower land elevation or deliver
that sediment to receiving
waters. In this case the sediment is usually deemed to result
from erosion. If the initial impact of rain droplets dislodges
soil, the phenomenon is called splash erosion". If the effects are
diffuse for a larger area and the velocity of moving runoff is
responsible for sediment pickup, the effect is called "sheet
erosion". If there are massive gouges in the earth from high
velocity flow for uncovered soil, then "gully erosion" may
result.
Fluvial bedforms
Any particle that is larger in diameter than approximately 0.7 mm will form visible topographic features on the river or stream bed. These are known as and include ripples, dunes, plane beds and antidunes. See bedforms for more detail. Again, bedforms are often preserved in sedimentary rocks and can be used to estimate the direction and magnitude of the depositing flow.Key depositional environments
The major fluvial (river and stream) environments for deposition of sediments include:- Deltas (arguably an intermediate environment between fluvial and marine)
- Point-bars
- Alluvial fans
- Braided rivers
- Oxbow lakes
- Levees
Shores and shallow seas
The second major environment where sediment may
be suspended in a fluid is in seas and oceans. The sediment could
consist of terrigenous material supplied by nearby rivers and
streams or reworked marine sediment (e.g. sand). In the mid-ocean, living
organisms are primarily responsible for the sediment accumulation,
their shells sinking to the ocean floor upon death.
Marine bedforms
Marine environments also see the formation of bedforms, whose characteristics are influenced by the tides or currents.Key depositional environments
The major areas for deposition of sediments in the marine environment include:- Littoral sands (e.g. beach sands, runoff river sands, coastal bars and spits, largely clastic with little faunal content)
- The continental shelf (silty clays, increasing marine faunal content).
- The shelf margin (low terrigenous supply, mostly calcareous faunal skeletons)
- The shelf slope (much more fine-grained silts and clays)
- Beds of estuaries with the resultant deposits called "bay mud".
See also
References
Donald R. Prothero and Fred Schwab, Sedimentary Geology: An Introduction to Sedimentary Rocks and Stratigraphy, W. H. Freeman (1996), ISBN 0 7167 2726 9. Raymond Siever, Sand, Scientific American Library, New York (1988), ISBN 0 7167 5021 X. Gary Nichols, Sedimentology & Stratigraphy, Wiley-Blackwell, Malden, MA (1999), ISBN 0 6320 3578 1.sediment in Bosnian: Sedimenti
sediment in Czech: Sediment
sediment in Danish: Sediment
sediment in German: Sedimentation
sediment in Estonian: Sete
sediment in Modern Greek (1453-): Ίζημα
sediment in Esperanto: Sedimento
sediment in Spanish: Sedimentación
sediment in French: Sédiment
sediment in Croatian: Sedimenti
sediment in Indonesian: Sedimentologi
sediment in Icelandic: Set
sediment in Italian: Sedimento
sediment in Dutch: Sediment
sediment in Japanese: 堆積物
sediment in Norwegian: Sediment
sediment in Polish: Osady
sediment in Portuguese: Sedimento
sediment in Russian: Наносы
sediment in Slovak: Sediment
sediment in Serbian: Седимент
sediment in Finnish: Sedimentti
sediment in Swedish: Sediment
sediment in Ukrainian: Відклади
sediment in Vietnamese: Trầm tích
sediment in Chinese: 沈積物
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alluvion, alluvium, ash, bottoms, cinder, clinker, debris, deposit, deposition, deposits, detritus, diluvium, draff, dregs, drift, dross, ember, feces, froth, grounds, lees, loess, moraine, offscum, precipitate, precipitation, remains, residue, residuum, scoria, scree, scum, sedimentate, settlings, silt, sinter, slag, smut, soot, sublimate