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Flexural isostatic response of continental-scale deltas to climatically driven sea level changes #24

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saraemp opened this issue May 17, 2024 · 15 comments
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model approved Model approved model created Model created model published Model published new model New model review requested Review requested

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@saraemp
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saraemp commented May 17, 2024

-> submitter ORCID (or name)

0000-0002-1270-4377

-> slug

polanco-2024-deltas

-> license

CC-BY-4.0

-> alternative license URL

No response

-> model category

model published in study

-> model status

completed

-> associated publication DOI

10.5194/esurf-12-301-2024

-> model creators

Sara Polanco (0000-0002-1270-4377)
0000-0003-0263-0084
Tristan Salles (0000-0001-6095-7689)
Frederick,Bruce C
0000-0002-2594-6965
0000-0003-3693-932X
0000-0003-3566-1557
0000-0003-2595-2414
0000-0003-3685-174X

-> title

No response

-> description

Two-thirds of the world's most populated cities are situated close to deltas. We use computer simulations to understand how deltas sink or rise in response to climate-driven sea level changes that operate from thousands to millions of years. Our research shows that because of the interaction between the outer layers of the Earth, sediment transport, and sea level changes deltas develop a self-regulated mechanism that modifies the space they need to gain or lose land.

-> abstract

No response

-> scientific keywords

Flexural isostasy
Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA)
Deltaic depocenters
Stratigraphic record

-> funder

Australian Research Council, IH130200012
Australian–American Fulbright Commission
The University of Melbourne

-> model embargo?

No

-> include model code ?

  • yes

-> model code/inputs DOI

10.5281/zenodo.10553849

-> model code/inputs notes

The input and boundary conditions for the model are structured as follows:
an input XML file where the initial and boundary conditions are set
a data folder containing the initial surface and the boundary conditions, in this case different sea-level scenarios
a series of IPython Notebooks used to run the experiment and perform some pre or post-processing tasks.

-> include model output data?

  • yes

-> data creators

0000-0002-1270-4377

-> model output data DOI

No response

-> model output data notes

The model output data is stored in a hdf5 format. You will see a h5 folder and a series of xdmf files.

  • h5 folder contains the hdf5 data, all the information computed by the model are stored in these files. You will have at least the tin (surface) and flow (stream network) dataset and also the sed (stratigraphy) data if the stratal structure is computed in your simulation.

  • two .xdmf files for the surface (tin_series.xdmf) and the flow network (flow_series.xdmf) that read the xmf files through time.

-> model output data size

No response

-> software framework DOI/URI

doi: 10.5281/zenodo.1069573

-> software framework source repository

https://github.com/badlands-model/badlands

-> name of primary software framework (e.g. Underworld, ASPECT, Badlands, OpenFOAM)

Badlands

-> software framework authors

No response

-> software & algorithm keywords

No response

-> computer URI/DOI

No response

-> add landing page image and caption

fig1
Our simulations produce catchment areas, river lengths, and volumes of deposited sediment that are consistent with the ranges observed in continental-scale deltas such as the Mississippi and Amazon rivers. (a) Example showing the outputs from the numerical simulation showing the elevation and bathymetry (top) and cumulative flexure (bottom). Model dimensions are 4500 km x 2000 km, with a vertical exaggeration of 100x. (b) Scatter plot of river length (top) and 405 shelf width (bottom) versus catchment area from river systems. Data is from Somme et al. (2009), Nyberg et al. (2018), Blum et al. (2013, 2017) and simulations presented in this study. Pal= Paleocene, Oli=Oligocene, PM= Paleo-Mississippi. (c) Example of synthetic stratigraphy from a simulation without (left) and with flexural compensation (right).

-> add an animation (if relevant)

https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/model_submission/assets/29790931/b6dae5a4-f5bd-413d-ab7f-14349e1f54a1
The animation shows the surface and stratigraphic evolution of our simulated continental-scale deltas. We let each simulation initialize and run for 2 Myr without any sea-level fluctuations so that the delta can reach dynamic equilibrium without any disturbances in base level, then impose climate-forced sea-level changes.

-> add a graphic abstract figure (if relevant)

egusphere-2023-53_Fig5.pdf

Output of numerical simulations with imposed synthetic sea-level curves with different frequencies (f) showing elevation, bathymetry and discharge of the river mouth at 8 Myr. Note the difference in lateral extent, elevation due to flexural rebound, and river mouth morphology between the flexural (top) and non-flexural (bottom) cases. (b) Change of river mouth location though time for simulations where synthetic and empirical sea-level curves were imposed. Mean river mouth transit distances in the non-flexurally compensated simulations are shown in lighter shades, whereas the flexurally compensated cases are shown in darker shades. (c) Bar plot showing the frequency of the number of times where the de-trended river-mouth trajectory crosses an arbitrary point in the shelf an indicator of how often the river mouth is close to the shelf break. NF = non-flexural, F = flexural, IH = icehouse, and GH = greenhouse.

-> add a model setup figure (if relevant)

fig_setup

-> add a description of your model setup

Planview of model setup (top) and cross-section in the middle of the modeling domain. The initial configuration of the modeling domain resembles the topography of a natural source-to-sink system with 3400 m elevation in the headwaters, a length of 4500 km, a downstream-decreasing fluvial channel slope, and successive inflections in gradient associated with the coastal-plain to continental shelf and shelf to slope transitions. To ensure that our simulated drainage basin produces a point-source for sediment input to the marine domain we imposed a longitudinal topographic low in the middle of the model.

Please provide any feedback on the model submission process?

Thanks Dan, great job!

@saraemp saraemp added the new model New model label May 17, 2024
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m-te-bot bot commented May 17, 2024

Model Report

Thank you for submitting.

Using Github actions, we have regenerated a report summarising information about your model

  • Please check the report below, including the Errors and Warnings section

  • You can update any information, by editing the markdown file at the top of the issue

  • these edits will trigger the report will be regenerated

  • once you are satisfied with the results, please add a review requested Review requested label

Parsed data

Section 1: Summary of your model

Model Submitter:

Sara Polanco (0000-0002-1270-4377)

Model Creator(s):

Model name:

polanco-2024-deltas

(this will be the name of the model repository when created)

Model long name:

Flexural isostatic response of continental-scale deltas to climatically driven sea level changes

License:

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

Model Category:

  • model published in study

Model Status:

  • completed

Associated Publication title:

Flexural isostatic response of continental-scale deltas to climatically driven sea level changes

Abstract:

Abstract. The interplay between climate-forced sea level change, erosional and depositional processes, and flexural isostasy in deep time on passive margin deltas remains poorly understood. We performed a series of conceptual simulations to investigate flexural isostatic responses to high-frequency fluctuations in water and sediment load associated with climatically driven sea level changes. We model a large drainage basin that discharges to a continental margin and produces a large deltaic depocenter, then prescribe synthetic and climatic-driven sea level curves of different frequencies to assess flexural response. Results show that flexural isostatic responses are bidirectional over 100–1000 kyr timescales and are in sync with the magnitude, frequency, and direction of sea level fluctuations and that isostatic adjustments play an important role in driving along-strike and cross-shelf river mouth migration and sediment accumulation. Our findings demonstrate that climate-forced sea level changes produce a feedback mechanism that results in self-sustaining creation of accommodation into which sediment is deposited and plays a major role in delta morphology and stratigraphic architecture.

Funder(s):

  • Australian Research Council
  • Australian–American Fulbright Commission
  • The University of Melbourne

Section 2: your model code, output data

** No embargo on model contents requested****Include model code:**

True

Model code notes:

The input and boundary conditions for the model are structured as follows:
an input XML file where the initial and boundary conditions are set
a data folder containing the initial surface and the boundary conditions, in this case different sea-level scenarios
a series of IPython Notebooks used to run the experiment and perform some pre or post-processing tasks.

Include model output data:

True

Model output data notes:

The model output data is stored in a hdf5 format. You will see a h5 folder and a series of xdmf files.

  • h5 folder contains the hdf5 data, all the information computed by the model are stored in these files. You will have at least the tin (surface) and flow (stream network) dataset and also the sed (stratigraphy) data if the stratal structure is computed in your simulation.

  • two .xdmf files for the surface (tin_series.xdmf) and the flow network (flow_series.xdmf) that read the xmf files through time.

Section 3: software framework and compute details

Software Framework DOI/URL:

Found software: Badlands

Software Repository:

https://github.com/badlands-model/badlands

Name of primary software framework:

Badlands

Section 4: web material (for mate.science)

Landing page image:

Filename: fig1.png
Caption: Our simulations produce catchment areas, river lengths, and volumes of deposited sediment that are consistent with the ranges observed in continental-scale deltas such as the Mississippi and Amazon rivers. (a) Example showing the outputs from the numerical simulation showing the elevation and bathymetry (top) and cumulative flexure (bottom). Model dimensions are 4500 km x 2000 km, with a vertical exaggeration of 100x. (b) Scatter plot of river length (top) and 405 shelf width (bottom) versus catchment area from river systems. Data is from Somme et al. (2009), Nyberg et al. (2018), Blum et al. (2013, 2017) and simulations presented in this study. Pal= Paleocene, Oli=Oligocene, PM= Paleo-Mississippi. (c) Example of synthetic stratigraphy from a simulation without (left) and with flexural compensation (right).

Animation:

Filename: animation.mp4
Caption: The animation shows the surface and stratigraphic evolution of our simulated continental-scale deltas. We let each simulation initialize and run for 2 Myr without any sea-level fluctuations so that the delta can reach dynamic equilibrium without any disturbances in base level, then impose climate-forced sea-level changes.

Graphic abstract:

Caption: egusphere-2023-53_Fig5.pdf

Output of numerical simulations with imposed synthetic sea-level curves with different frequencies (f) showing elevation, bathymetry and discharge of the river mouth at 8 Myr. Note the difference in lateral extent, elevation due to flexural rebound, and river mouth morphology between the flexural (top) and non-flexural (bottom) cases. (b) Change of river mouth location though time for simulations where synthetic and empirical sea-level curves were imposed. Mean river mouth transit distances in the non-flexurally compensated simulations are shown in lighter shades, whereas the flexurally compensated cases are shown in darker shades. (c) Bar plot showing the frequency of the number of times where the de-trended river-mouth trajectory crosses an arbitrary point in the shelf an indicator of how often the river mouth is close to the shelf break. NF = non-flexural, F = flexural, IH = icehouse, and GH = greenhouse.

Model setup figure:

Filename: fig_setup.png
Caption:
Description: Planview of model setup (top) and cross-section in the middle of the modeling domain. The initial configuration of the modeling domain resembles the topography of a natural source-to-sink system with 3400 m elevation in the headwaters, a length of 4500 km, a downstream-decreasing fluvial channel slope, and successive inflections in gradient associated with the coastal-plain to continental shelf and shelf to slope transitions. To ensure that our simulated drainage basin produces a point-source for sediment input to the marine domain we imposed a longitudinal topographic low in the middle of the model.

Errors and Warnings

Associated Publication
Error fetching metadata with application/ld+json from https://api.crossref.org/works/10.5194/esurf-12-301-2024: 406 Client Error: Not Acceptable for url: https://api.crossref.org/works/10.5194/esurf-12-301-2024
Software Framework DOI/URI
doi.org metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
Software & algorithm keywords
Warning: no keywords given.
Submitter
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format

Scientific keywords
Warning: No keywords given
Could not parse Embargo date. Check format is
Model code/inputs DOI
Invalid URL '10.5281/zenodo.10553849': No scheme supplied. Perhaps you meant https://10.5281/zenodo.10553849?
Data creators
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
Model output DOI
Warning: No DOI/URI provided.
Model data size
Warning: No notes provided.
Invalid size stringComputer URI/DOI
Warning: No URI/DOI provided.
Model setup figure
Error: No caption found for image.

Next steps

  • once the model_reviewers team has approved the model, we will create a repository for your model

@ModelAtlasofTheEarth ModelAtlasofTheEarth deleted a comment from m-te-bot bot May 20, 2024
@ModelAtlasofTheEarth ModelAtlasofTheEarth deleted a comment from m-te-bot bot May 20, 2024
@ModelAtlasofTheEarth ModelAtlasofTheEarth deleted a comment from m-te-bot bot May 20, 2024
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@dansand dansand added new model New model and removed workflow_error new model New model labels May 20, 2024
@m-te-bot
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m-te-bot bot commented May 20, 2024

Model Report

Thank you for submitting.

Using Github actions, we have regenerated a report summarising information about your model

  • Please check the report below, including the Errors and Warnings section

  • You can update any information, by editing the markdown file at the top of the issue

  • these edits will trigger the report will be regenerated

  • once you are satisfied with the results, please add a review requested Review requested label

Parsed data

Section 1: Summary of your model

Model Submitter:

Sara Polanco (0000-0002-1270-4377)

Model Creator(s):

Model name:

polanco-2024-deltas

(this will be the name of the model repository when created)

Model long name:

Flexural isostatic response of continental-scale deltas to climatically driven sea level changes

License:

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

Model Category:

  • model published in study

Model Status:

  • completed

Associated Publication title:

Flexural isostatic response of continental-scale deltas to climatically driven sea level changes

Abstract:

Abstract. The interplay between climate-forced sea level change, erosional and depositional processes, and flexural isostasy in deep time on passive margin deltas remains poorly understood. We performed a series of conceptual simulations to investigate flexural isostatic responses to high-frequency fluctuations in water and sediment load associated with climatically driven sea level changes. We model a large drainage basin that discharges to a continental margin and produces a large deltaic depocenter, then prescribe synthetic and climatic-driven sea level curves of different frequencies to assess flexural response. Results show that flexural isostatic responses are bidirectional over 100–1000 kyr timescales and are in sync with the magnitude, frequency, and direction of sea level fluctuations and that isostatic adjustments play an important role in driving along-strike and cross-shelf river mouth migration and sediment accumulation. Our findings demonstrate that climate-forced sea level changes produce a feedback mechanism that results in self-sustaining creation of accommodation into which sediment is deposited and plays a major role in delta morphology and stratigraphic architecture.

Scientific Keywords:

  • Flexural isostasy
    Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA)
    Deltaic depocenters
    Stratigraphic record

Funder(s):

  • Australian Research Council
  • Australian–American Fulbright Commission
  • The University of Melbourne

Section 2: your model code, output data

** No embargo on model contents requested****Include model code:**

True

Model code notes:

The input and boundary conditions for the model are structured as follows:
an input XML file where the initial and boundary conditions are set
a data folder containing the initial surface and the boundary conditions, in this case different sea-level scenarios
a series of IPython Notebooks used to run the experiment and perform some pre or post-processing tasks.

Include model output data:

True

Model output data notes:

The model output data is stored in a hdf5 format. You will see a h5 folder and a series of xdmf files.

  • h5 folder contains the hdf5 data, all the information computed by the model are stored in these files. You will have at least the tin (surface) and flow (stream network) dataset and also the sed (stratigraphy) data if the stratal structure is computed in your simulation.

  • two .xdmf files for the surface (tin_series.xdmf) and the flow network (flow_series.xdmf) that read the xmf files through time.

Section 3: software framework and compute details

Software Framework DOI/URL:

Found software: Badlands

Software Repository:

https://github.com/badlands-model/badlands

Name of primary software framework:

Badlands

Section 4: web material (for mate.science)

Landing page image:

Filename: fig1.png
Caption: Our simulations produce catchment areas, river lengths, and volumes of deposited sediment that are consistent with the ranges observed in continental-scale deltas such as the Mississippi and Amazon rivers. (a) Example showing the outputs from the numerical simulation showing the elevation and bathymetry (top) and cumulative flexure (bottom). Model dimensions are 4500 km x 2000 km, with a vertical exaggeration of 100x. (b) Scatter plot of river length (top) and 405 shelf width (bottom) versus catchment area from river systems. Data is from Somme et al. (2009), Nyberg et al. (2018), Blum et al. (2013, 2017) and simulations presented in this study. Pal= Paleocene, Oli=Oligocene, PM= Paleo-Mississippi. (c) Example of synthetic stratigraphy from a simulation without (left) and with flexural compensation (right).

Animation:

Filename: animation.mp4
Caption: The animation shows the surface and stratigraphic evolution of our simulated continental-scale deltas. We let each simulation initialize and run for 2 Myr without any sea-level fluctuations so that the delta can reach dynamic equilibrium without any disturbances in base level, then impose climate-forced sea-level changes.

Graphic abstract:

Caption: egusphere-2023-53_Fig5.pdf

Output of numerical simulations with imposed synthetic sea-level curves with different frequencies (f) showing elevation, bathymetry and discharge of the river mouth at 8 Myr. Note the difference in lateral extent, elevation due to flexural rebound, and river mouth morphology between the flexural (top) and non-flexural (bottom) cases. (b) Change of river mouth location though time for simulations where synthetic and empirical sea-level curves were imposed. Mean river mouth transit distances in the non-flexurally compensated simulations are shown in lighter shades, whereas the flexurally compensated cases are shown in darker shades. (c) Bar plot showing the frequency of the number of times where the de-trended river-mouth trajectory crosses an arbitrary point in the shelf an indicator of how often the river mouth is close to the shelf break. NF = non-flexural, F = flexural, IH = icehouse, and GH = greenhouse.

Model setup figure:

Filename: fig_setup.png
Caption:
Description: Planview of model setup (top) and cross-section in the middle of the modeling domain. The initial configuration of the modeling domain resembles the topography of a natural source-to-sink system with 3400 m elevation in the headwaters, a length of 4500 km, a downstream-decreasing fluvial channel slope, and successive inflections in gradient associated with the coastal-plain to continental shelf and shelf to slope transitions. To ensure that our simulated drainage basin produces a point-source for sediment input to the marine domain we imposed a longitudinal topographic low in the middle of the model.

Errors and Warnings

Associated Publication
Error fetching metadata with application/ld+json from https://api.crossref.org/works/10.5194/esurf-12-301-2024: 406 Client Error: Not Acceptable for url: https://api.crossref.org/works/10.5194/esurf-12-301-2024
Software Framework DOI/URI
doi.org metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
Software & algorithm keywords
Warning: no keywords given.
Submitter
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format

Model creators
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
Could not parse Embargo date. Check format is
Model code/inputs DOI
Invalid URL '10.5281/zenodo.10553849': No scheme supplied. Perhaps you meant https://10.5281/zenodo.10553849?
Data creators
ORCID metadata record succesfully extracted in json-ld format
Model output DOI
Warning: No DOI/URI provided.
Model data size
Warning: No notes provided.
Invalid size stringComputer URI/DOI
Warning: No URI/DOI provided.
Model setup figure
Error: No caption found for image.

Next steps

  • once the model_reviewers team has approved the model, we will create a repository for your model

@dansand dansand added the model approved Model approved label May 20, 2024
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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas

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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas

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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas-1

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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas

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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas

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Model repository created at https://github.com/ModelAtlasofTheEarth/polanco-2024-deltas

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