Biogeoacoustic sediment properties along a horizontal sand-mud gradient

2021 
Whether deposited from the water column or generated by benthic infauna, interstitial organic matter is a ubiquitous constituent of marine sediment and is particularly prevalent in sediments with significant silt/clay fractions. Interstitial organic matter suspends silt and clay particles in the sediment matrix, adsorbs onto mineral surfaces, and resides between mineral contacts, all of which are hypothesized to alter geoacoustic properties. However, the extent to which interstitial organics alter geoacoustic properties is understudied and warrants further investigation. To address this, diver cores were collected along a horizontal sand-mud gradient in Mobile Bay, Alabama. The sediment was subsequently processed in the laboratory, where compressional wave speed (10 kHz to 1 MHz), compressional wave attenuation (100 kHz to 1 MHz), density, porosity, grain-size distribution, and organic carbon and nitrogen content were measured. In addition, physics-based geoacoustic models, such as VGS(λ) and mCREB, were fit to the wide range of sediment types. Measured geoacoustic properties and fit parameters inherent to each sediment acoustics model are compared with organic sediment properties. The extent to which organics control sediment geoacoustic properties and considerations to include organics in future modeling efforts will be discussed. [Work sponsored by ONR.]
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