| Surficial Sediment Distribution of Maryland's Chesapeake Bay | contact: Jeffrey Halka (jhalka@mgs.md.gov) |
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The bottom of the Chesapeake Bay is covered by sediments that have been
A report on “Sediment
Processes in the Chesapeake Bay and Watershed” (2003) discusses these processes in detail. In
different areas of the bay, the contributions of each of these sources vary. Composed
of different
proportions
of sand-, silt-, and clay-sized particles, the
sediments deposited on the Bay floor play a complicated role in the Bay ecosystem.
They provide a variety of habitats for bottom-dwelling organisms. They are the
"soil" in which Bay grasses grow. They attract, trap, and transport waterborne
pollutants. And they continually fill shipping channels. When suspended, sediments
cloud the water column, block sunlight, and undermine the health of certain aquatic
species. Understanding the role and distribution of sediments is essential to
restoring the health of the Bay and balancing its usage.
Until the 1970s, the distribution
of sediments on the Bay floor was poorly understood. Studies were restricted to relatively
small areas of the Bay or
were based on a limited number of observations Bay-wide. Beginning in 1976,
the coastal geologists of the Maryland Geological Survey conducted a comprehensive
survey of Bay bottom sediments, known as the Chesapeake Bay Earth Science Study
(CBESS). With funding from the State of Maryland and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, they collected over 4,000 surface sediment samples from the
Bay in Maryland - one sample every square kilometer. (Scientists at the Virginia
Institute of Marine Science did the same for the Bay in Virginia.) Laboratory
technicians analyzed the samples for grain size (the proportions of sand-, silt-,
and clay-sized particles) as well as water, carbon, and sulfur content.
For
the sediment distribution
map, we use Shepard's sediment classification to describe the
types of sediment within the bay. Shepard's classification is based on percentages of sand,
silt and clay within the sediment. This classification is represented by a ternary diagram,
which is displayed on the sediment distribution map. For an explanation of Shepard's classification,
and examples of how to interpret Shepard's
diagram, click here.
CHESAPEAKE BAY SEDIMENT DISTRIBUTION
The sediment distribution map clearly illustrates the dominance of sand and silty clay in the| Sediment type | Area (km2) |
| Sand | 1445 |
| Silty sand | 56 |
| Clayey sand | 78 |
| (TOTAL SANDS) | (1579) |
| Silt | <1 |
| Sandy silt | 43 |
| Clayey silt | 217 |
| (TOTAL SILTS) | (261) |
| Clay | 75 |
| Sandy clay | 5 |
| Silty clay | 1198 |
| (TOTAL CLAYS) | (1278) |
| Sand-silt-clay | 235 |
Maryland part of the Bay. Larger in size, sands are generally located along the
shallow margins of the Bay, adjacent to the shoreline, and on large shelves around
the peninsulas and islands of the Eastern Shore. Sands typically accumulate in
higher energy environments, moving by traction or saltation along the bed surface.
Waves and currents near shore remove or prevent the deposition of finer-grained
sediments, leaving sand behind. In contrast, silty clays generally occur in deeper
water and in the axial channels of the Bay. They represent the deposition of fine
material from suspension in lower energy environments, where sand-sized particles
cannot be carried.
The accumulation of mixed sediments, intermediate in composition
between sands and silty clays, is generally thought to result from a gradual decrease of
energy
associated with the transition from traction to suspension transport. One would
expect such sediments to occur in distinct bands separating sands from silty-clays.
In the Maryland part of the Bay, however, mixed sediments tend to occur as isolated
pockets surrounded by one of the two dominant sediment types, not as narrow, intervening
zones. This distribution pattern may be an artifact of the sampling grid; bands
less than 1 km wide may have been erratically sampled. Other processes may also
explain their distribution. Mixed sediments may be deposited by alternating high
and low energy events, which produce inter-layered sands and silty clays that
are later mixed by biological activity. They may represent underwater exposures
of pre-Holocene sediments deposited under different conditions. Or, man's activities,
such as dredging and the overboard placement of dredged material, may generate
such mixed sediments.
The sediment distribution map is
one of the results of that study; it shows the grain size composition of sediments
in the Maryland part of the Chesapeake Bay. The database use to create the sediment
distribution map is available for download.
It contains all of the physical and geochemical measurements made on the CBESS
sediment samples, including grain size, water content, bulk density, total and
organic carbon content, and sulfur content. The data table, and the CBESS project
itself, have been exhaustively documented using a federal metadata standard.
The metadata, also available for download,
contains detailed information on sample collection and analysis techniques.
That documentation is available in two formats, ASCII and WordPerfect .
This map is also
available as a GIS data set (shape files),an
Adobe Acrobat
PDF file (204kb), an online raster map, and an
interactive
map (plugin required)