5 Nile Delta - Low energy Flashcards

1
Q

General information: How long is the River Nile delta?

A

One of the largest in the world - 160km from north to south, 240km from west to east and covering approx 20,000km2 of land
Longest river in the world (6650km), catch,ent area of more than 3 million km2

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2
Q

General information: What is the rainfall and moisture of the Nile delta?

A
  • 600mm mean annual rainfall of the catchment
  • Average discharge is less than 3000 cumecs (compared to 200000+ from the Amazon)
  • Much runs through arid/semi-arid regions of Sahara Desert with high evaporation rates
  • Ethiopian Highlands has highest rainfall in the catchment (2000mm+ of monsoon rain). Feeds Blue Nile tributary
  • White Nile tributary flows from Lake Victoria in central East Africa
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3
Q

General information: How is the Nile delta evolving - what was it like before the Aswan Dam?

A
  • Millennia of fluvial sediment inputs > marine sediment outputs led to steady accretion of the delta
  • Accretion seasonal, corresponding with the annual flood caused by monsoon rains in the Ethiopian Highlands
  • Marine processes seasonal, longshore currents strongest in winter, time of greatest reshaping of delta sediment
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4
Q

General information: How is the Nile delta evolving - what was it like after the Aswan Dam?

A

Dam constructed and population growth
No seasonal flood and reduced sediment input -> year-on-year net erosion, compounded by long-term eustatic and isostatic processes
Long-term trends but single events may cause significant local change (eg particular storm causing a breach in a bar)

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5
Q

Energy: What are the wind patterns in the Nile Delta?

A

Prevailing wind direction is northwesterly
Winds from the northwest are more common in summer
Gentle southwesterly winds are more common in spring
Northerly wind are more common in winter

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6
Q

Energy: What is the tidal range?

A

Microtidal range (just a few cm)
Enclosed nature of the Mediterranean Sea = low tidal energy input

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7
Q

Energy: What are the wave patterns?

A

55-60% of waves come from the west, northwest and north
8% from east

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8
Q

Sediment: What did rapid population growth in Egypt lead to?

A

98 million and an annual growth rate of 2.5% (2017)
Leads to increased water abstraction from the Nile and its distributaries, decreasing sediment supply to the delta

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9
Q

Sediment: What is the sediment load and yield of the River Nile?

A

Despite a low discharge, River Nile carries a huge sediment load
Suspended sediment load is 30% day (<0.002mm diameter), 40% silt (0.002-0.02mm) and 30% fine sand (0.02-0.2mm)
Average annual sediment yield is 4.2t/ha/year and the total is 91.3 million for the Blue Nile Basin in Ethiopia

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10
Q

Sediment: How did the construction of the Aswan High Dam (1964) affect sediment?

A

Regulates discharge downstream and trapping sediment behind it
Before construction, whole delta was briefly submerged during the Nile’s annual flood - alluvial deposits depths of 4m at Aswan, 9.6m at Cairo and even deeper on the delta itself
Sediment accretion on delta has dropped from 120 million tonnes/year to negligible amounts
Annual flood of the delta no longer happens

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11
Q

Geology: What is the geology of the delta?

A

Soft, unconsolidated sediments of the delta have a very weak physical lithology and are therefore vulnerable to marine erosion processes (eg abrasion, hydraulic action)

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12
Q

Landforms: What are the landforms on the foreshore plain?

A

Elongated ridges running parallel to the present shoreline, with brackish lagoons, salt marshes and alluvial deposits occupying the troughs between them

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13
Q

Landforms: Where are the sandbars are what is their nature?

A

Nearshore underwater sandbars off Abu Air headland and Port Said, typical of tideless seas
Rip currents create a crescentic bar shape at Abu Qie
Run parallel to shore, reflecting dominant eastward longshore currents and drift.

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14
Q

Landforms: Where are the higher sediment yields and what do they cause?

A

In the two main distributaries creates two lobes that extend beyond the rest of the delta

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15
Q

Landforms: What is the coastal plain?

A

Consists of the foreshore plain, the frontal plain and the sandy zone
Occupies the northern part, running parallel to the Mediterranean coastline and close to or below sea level

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16
Q

Landforms: What is the frontal plain like?

A

Scattered eroded limestone outcrops and clay deposits
South of the foreshore plain

17
Q

Landforms: What does the Nile split into?

A

Two major distributaries - Rosetta and Damietta - at Cairo
160km of the coast
Multiple smaller distributaries spreading throughout the delta, each contained within levees and separated by crevasse splays of land

18
Q

Landforms: What are the sandy formations at the Nile Delta?

A

Sheets, dunes and hummocks

19
Q

Landforms: What shape is the delta and why is this?

A

Smooth, concave arcuate shape instead of bird’s foot delta
Due to reshaping of deposited material by longshore currents
Reworked sediments forms a series of curved barrier bars, closing off segments of the Mediterranean to form lagoons (eg Lake Edku, Lake Manzala) that quickly become brackish and fill with fine sediment

20
Q

Processes: How was the Nile Delta built?

A

Deposition of alluvial material has occurred at a faster rate than erosion by marine processes for 3000+ years

21
Q

Processes: What is deposition aided by?

A

Deposition is aided bu flocculation, plant colonisation (stabilising deposited sediment) and a reduction in fluvial energy as the Nile enters the sea

22
Q

Processes: What is another process which contributes to sediment?

A

Fluvial erosion - especially within the wetter areas of the Nile catchment (eg Ethiopian Highlands or the Ruwenzori Mountains of Rwanda)

23
Q

Processes: What is another significant process in the arid Sahara?

A

Aeolian erosion and transportation - little vegetation to anchor fine sediments
Weathering processes in the arid/semi-arid regions of the Sahara (eg thermal expansion) also contributes sediment

24
Q

Processes: Why and where is isostatic sea level rise occurring?

A

Northern parts of the delta
Rise of 9mm/year due to compaction of unconsolidated sediments

25
Q

Processes: What process do the prevalent NW winds enhance?

A

The constant eastern movement of water and sediment in the eastern Mediterranean
Surface current velocities vary seasonally: spring (8.4cm/sec), summer (9.26-13.5cm/sec), autumn (4.46cm/sec), winter (23.4cm/sec - very strong winds)

26
Q

Processes: How was the Aswan Dam impacted the balance of processes?

A

Imbalance between sediment accretion and erosion
Shoreline of the NW Nile Delta has seen accelerated erosion and rates of retreat as high as 148m/year

27
Q

Processes: What has also contributed to higher erosion rates?

A

Rising sea levels in the Mediterranean of 1.2mm/year
Deeper water produces larger waves with higher energy levels and the potential to reach further inland
A 1m rise in sea level would result in 20% of the delta being submerged