Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Giulio Mariotti is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Giulio Mariotti.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Critical width of tidal flats triggers marsh collapse in the absence of sea-level rise

Giulio Mariotti; Sergio Fagherazzi

High rates of wave-induced erosion along salt marsh boundaries challenge the idea that marsh survival is dictated by the competition between vertical sediment accretion and relative sea-level rise. Because waves pounding marshes are often locally generated in enclosed basins, the depth and width of surrounding tidal flats have a pivoting control on marsh erosion. Here, we show the existence of a threshold width for tidal flats bordering salt marshes. Once this threshold is exceeded, irreversible marsh erosion takes place even in the absence of sea-level rise. This catastrophic collapse occurs because of the positive feedbacks among tidal flat widening by wave-induced marsh erosion, tidal flat deepening driven by wave bed shear stress, and local wind wave generation. The threshold width is determined by analyzing the 50-y evolution of 54 marsh basins along the US Atlantic Coast. The presence of a critical basin width is predicted by a dynamic model that accounts for both horizontal marsh migration and vertical adjustment of marshes and tidal flats. Variability in sediment supply, rather than in relative sea-level rise or wind regime, explains the different critical width, and hence erosion vulnerability, found at different sites. We conclude that sediment starvation of coastlines produced by river dredging and damming is a major anthropogenic driver of marsh loss at the study sites and generates effects at least comparable to the accelerating sea-level rise due to global warming.


Water Resources Research | 2014

Dual role of salt marsh retreat: Long‐term loss and short‐term resilience

Giulio Mariotti; Joel A. Carr

Two major causes of salt marsh loss are vertical drowning, when sediment accumulation on the platform cannot keep vertical pace with sea level rise, and horizontal retreat, associated with wave-induced marsh boundary erosion. Despite these processes having been extensively documented and modeled, it is unclear which loss modality dominates given a set of environmental parameters. A three-point dynamic model was developed to predict marsh loss as a function of sea level rise, allochthonous sediment supply, wind regime, tidal range, and marsh bank and mudflat erodability. Marsh horizontal and vertical evolutions were found to respond in opposing ways to wave-induced erosion processes. Marsh horizontal retreat was triggered by large mudflats, strong winds, high erodability of marsh bank and mudflat, whereas the opposite conditions acted to reduce the sediment supply to the marsh platform, promoting marsh loss to drowning. With low and moderate rates of sea level rise (∼5 mm/yr), retreat was found to be a more likely marsh loss modality than drowning. However, conditions associated with marsh retreat also increase the system resilience by transferring sediment on the marsh platform and preventing drowning. Our results suggest the use of a modular strategy for short-term marsh management: selectively protect extensive salt marsh regions by maintaining healthy vegetation on the platform, while allowing other areas to retreat, leveraging the natural resilience embedded in the lateral loss of marsh extent.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Interactions between barrier islands and backbarrier marshes affect island system response to sea level rise: Insights from a coupled model

David C. Walters; Laura J. Moore; Orencio Durán Vinent; Sergio Fagherazzi; Giulio Mariotti

Interactions between backbarrier marshes and barrier islands will likely play an important role in determining how low-lying coastal systems respond to sea level rise and changes in storminess in the future. To assess the role of couplings between marshes and barrier islands under changing conditions, we develop and apply a coupled barrier island-marsh model (GEOMBEST+) to assess the impact of overwash deposition on backbarrier marsh morphology and of marsh morphology on rates of island migration. Our model results suggest that backbarrier marsh width is in a constant state of change until either the backbarrier basin becomes completely filled or backbarrier marsh deposits have completely eroded away. Results also suggest that overwash deposition is an important source of sediment, which allows existing narrow marshes to be maintained in a long-lasting alternate state (~500 m wide in the Virginia Barrier Islands) within a range of conditions under which they would otherwise disappear. The existence of a narrow marsh state is supported by observations of backbarrier marshes along the eastern shore of Virginia. Additional results suggest that marshes reduce accommodation in the backbarrier bay, which, in turn, decreases island migration rate. As climate change results in sea level rise, and the increased potential for intense hurricanes resulting in overwash, it is likely that these couplings will become increasingly important in determining future system behavior.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2015

Dynamics of River Mouth Deposits

Sergio Fagherazzi; Douglas A. Edmonds; William Nardin; Nicoletta Leonardi; Alberto Canestrelli; Federico Falcini; Douglas J. Jerolmack; Giulio Mariotti; Joel C. Rowland; Rudy Slingerland

Bars and subaqueous levees often form at river mouths due to high sediment availability. Once these deposits emerge and develop into islands, they become important elements of the coastal landscape, hosting rich ecosystems. Sea level rise and sediment starvation are jeopardizing these landforms, motivating a thorough analysis of the mechanisms responsible for their formation and evolution. Here we present recent studies on the dynamics of mouth bars and subaqueous levees. The review encompasses both hydrodynamic and morphological results. We first analyze the hydrodynamics of the water jet exiting a river mouth. We then show how this dynamics coupled to sediment transport leads to the formation of mouth bars and levees. Specifically, we discuss the role of sediment eddy diffusivity and potential vorticity on sediment redistribution and related deposits. The effect of waves, tides, sediment characteristics, and vegetation on river mouth deposits is included in our analysis, thus accounting for the inherent complexity of the coastal environment where these landforms are common. Based on the results presented herein, we discuss in detail how river mouth deposits can be used to build new land or restore deltaic shorelines threatened by erosion.


Geology | 2016

Insights into cyanobacterial fossilization in Ediacaran siliciclastic environments

Sharon A. Newman; Giulio Mariotti; Sara B. Pruss; Tanja Bosak

Ediacaran sedimentary successions are noted for the preservation of microbes and microbial textures on the surfaces of sandstones and siltstones. Although microorganisms have been preserved in coarse-grained siliciclastic sand throughout geologic history, the exceptional preservation of microbes in Ediacaran sediments suggests the potential for a unique taphonomic window. Here, we identify conditions conducive to the fossilization of filamentous cyanobacteria growing in the presence of siliciclastic sand and demonstrate that the sheaths of filamentous cyanobacteria can become coated by clay minerals within days under oxic conditions. Smooth, extensive mineral coatings develop in the presence of 5.6 to 55.6 mg/L of suspended clay and 0.1 mM or greater concentrations of dissolved silica. Thus, elevated concentrations of seawater silica and the delivery of suspended clays promote microbial preservation on sandy and silty surfaces. These factors likely facilitated microbial fossilization in coarse-grained siliciclastic sand throughout the Ediacaran Period and may have also contributed to microbial fossilization in siliciclastic deposits at other times throughout Earth’s history.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

A numerical model for the coupled long‐term evolution of salt marshes and tidal flats

Giulio Mariotti; Sergio Fagherazzi


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Influence of storm surges and sea level on shallow tidal basin erosive processes

Giulio Mariotti; Sergio Fagherazzi; Pl Wiberg; Kj Mcglathery; Luca Carniello; Andrea Defina


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Sediment eddy diffusivity in meandering turbulent jets: Implications for levee formation at river mouths

Giulio Mariotti; F. Falcini; N. Geleynse; Michele Guala; Tao Sun; Sergio Fagherazzi


Nature Geoscience | 2014

Microbial shaping of sedimentary wrinkle structures

Giulio Mariotti; Sara B. Pruss; J.T. Perron; Tanja Bosak


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Growth of river mouth bars in sheltered bays in the presence of frontal waves

William Nardin; Giulio Mariotti; Douglas A. Edmonds; R. Guercio; Sergio Fagherazzi

Collaboration


Dive into the Giulio Mariotti's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tanja Bosak

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sharon A. Newman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douglas A. Edmonds

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alberto Canestrelli

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David C. Walters

Virginia Institute of Marine Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge