The sand cover is best developed (1.5 m max. thickness) in the larger bays centred on Wellington Harbour entrance. Here it has undergone bouts of accretion (indicated by advances of cover edges) that have ended in erosion (with retreat of edges). Mobility of sand is induced on a daily to annual basis by tides reinforced by southerly swell and storm-driven currents. These high-frequency events are superimposed on annular to decadal variations that probably relate to the frequency of gales and storms, and to variations in sediment supply caused by local earthquakes, changes in land use, and climatic cycles.
Outside the bays, on the open shelf, the combination of a more vigorous tidal flow and reduced sediment supply mean that the sand cover is much less extensive and more mobile. The seabed is predominantly coarse sand - fine gravel with a megarippled surface formed by southerly swell. Tides become progressively stronger to the west, and, in the Narrows of Cook Strait, currents are sufficiently powerful to keep sand in near-constant motion and erode the fine gravel down to underlying boulders and rock.
Keywords Cook Strait; sediment transport; inner shelf sand; side-scan sonar
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1995, Vol. 38: 451-470
0028-8306/95/3804-0451 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 1995
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (4078K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)