NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-AFSC-104
Surficial sediments of the eastern Bering Sea continental shelf: EBSSED database documentation
Abstract
The texture of surficial seafloor sediments, that is, the frequency
distribution of grain sizes, is a fundamental property of the benthic marine environment.
It affects such basic physical characteristics of the seafloor as porosity, permeability,
and compaction, which in turn may affect the distribution of plants and animals. A number
of investigations have reported spatial variation in texture on the eastern Bering Sea
(EBS) continental shelf. However, many of these studies were limited to relatively small
portions of the shelf, while others characterized larger areas by spatially averaging
relatively sparse data. The original studies varied somewhat in methods of analyzing
sample texture or in the descriptors used to characterize it. In order to facilitate
descriptions of groundfish habitat over a large portion of the EBS shelf, we have
assembled a single comprehensive database of the point sample data (EBSSED; n = 2,587)
from all available sources. The database represents sediment variation over the study area
with uncompromized (i.e., original) spatial detail. Textural data in the database are of
two main types: 1) standardized statistics characterizing sample grain size distribution
based on laboratory measurements (granulometric data), including % composition by size
grades (e.g., gravel, sand, mud) and size distribution parameters (e.g., mean size); and
2) sample descriptions from less exacting, more subjective visual/tactile observations,
usually made in the field, establishing size-grade constituents. In addition the EBSSED
database includes two descriptive fields which were each added to characterize sample
grain size distribution by a single, standardized variable based on the original data.
These fields classify samples according to gravel-sand-mud composition using high and low
resolution schemes derived from Folks (1954) classic ternary diagram. The high
resolution scheme classifies 903 samples with detailed granulometric data into 15 textural
classes, providing the greater detail regarding textural variation. The low resolution
scheme (7 classes) is designed to allow unambiguous classification of nearly all samples
(n = 2457) including those with subjective visual/tactile descriptions. It represents the
maximum number of samples according to a single common variable and thus provides the most
spatially detailed data for the study area, albeit at the expense of some of the textural
detail for samples analyzed in the laboratory.
Overall, the EBSSED database is the most comprehensive and detailed source of
information about surficial sediment textures in the EBS study area. Patterns observed in
the data generally agree with large-scale textural maps and summaries by previous
investigators, particularly a general pattern, with exceptions, of decreasing average
grain size with increasing depth and distance from shore. However, those previous
large-scale works spatially smoothed data for the study area from smaller, more sparsely
distributed sets of samples. The EBSSED database preserves potentially important
fine-scale variation.
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