Research news on bedforms

Bedforms are sedimentary structures that develop on the beds of rivers, coastal zones, lakes, or submarine environments through interactions between fluid flow and a mobile sediment layer. They arise from flow instabilities and sediment transport processes (bedload and suspended load), organizing grains into features such as ripples, dunes, antidunes, bars, and plane beds. Bedform morphology, scale, and migration rate depend on flow regime, sediment size, flow depth, and shear stress. They strongly modulate hydraulic roughness, flow resistance, and sediment flux, and their preserved stratification provides key information for interpreting paleoflow conditions and reconstructing depositional environments in sedimentology and stratigraphy.

Divers discover surprising changes to offshore kelp forest

For nearly half a century, Brown University marine biologist Jon Witman has been diving Cashes Ledge, an underwater mountain range in the center of the Gulf of Maine that is home to one of the largest kelp forests on the ...

Frozen in time: Rock formations hint at Mars's ancient climate

Long ago, flowing wind and water shaped Mars's malleable sand and sediment into dunes, ripples and other landscape patterns, called bedforms. Over billions of years, some of these landforms hardened into rock—scientists ...