5:15 PM - 7:15 PM
[MIS11-P04] Experimental study on the formation of Antidune cross- stratification in a short time due to tsunami intrusion
Keywords:Antidune cross-stratification, Tsunami deposits, Flume experiments
A small circulating flume (4m long, 40cm high, 8cm wide) at the Department of Information Science, Osaka Institute of Technology was used for the experiment. Considering the topography of the excavation site in Iwanuma City, a sand pile (25cm long, 120cm wide) was placed in the upstream part of the flume to reproduce the condition in which a highly suspended supercritical flow running, as occurs during a tsunami intrusion. Water was directly supplied from the lower tank to the upstream side using a pump. The experiment was conducted under five different conditions with different flume gradients: Experiment 1: 1.8°, Experiment 2: 3.0°, Experiment 3: 1.5°, Experiment 4: 1.0°, and Experiment 5: 1.2°. The flow over the sand pile flows down the downstream slope of the sand pile in a supercritical flow, eroding it. Starting from the weir at the downstream end (approximately 3 cm), antidunes formed in the downstream part of the flume in three of the five conditions (Experiments 1, 4, and 5), leaving a sedimentary structure. This took approximately one minute. In Experiment 1, breaking wave was also observed in association with the formation of antidunes. The sedimentary structure observed in all three conditions was a shallow dish-shaped structure in which laminae cut each other, and laminae gently sloping upstream. The structure in which shallow dish-shaped laminae cut each other was most frequently seen in Experiment 1, where wave breaking occurred.
In this way, it was shown that antidune cross-stratification can be formed and preserved in a short time in unsteady high-veloocity flows containing a large amount of suspended sand.
References
Goto, K., Ishizawa T., Ebina Y., Imamura F., Sato S., Udo K., 2021, Ten years after the 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake and tsunami: Geological and environmental effects and implications for disaster policy changes. Earth Science Reviews, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2020.103417
Imura, H., Goto, K., Yokokawa, M., and Kawamata, T., 2024, Antidune structure in tsunami deposits. Abstracts of the Annual meeting of the Sedimentological Society of Japan 2024 Kumamoto, p.3, pp.71-72.
Iwanuma City Board of Education, 2017, Report on the investigation of buried cultural properties related to the reconstruction of the Great East Japan Earthquake V. Report on the investigation of cultural properties in Iwanuma City, Miyagi Prefecture, Vol. 18.