Abstract
The redistribution of sediments by tidal streams has been demonstrated in a number of ways in the seas around Britain. For example, the numerous banks in the North Sea are elongated parallel to the streams, while the depth and position of certain channels are subject to such important changes in position that re-surveys have to be made each year or so (Robinson, 1956). In the same region the streams, reaching about a knot or more at the surface, have wrought a large area of sand floor into ridges normal to their path. Off the Dutch coast the grade of the sand (Jarke, 1956) decreases in their inferred direction of advance (Stride & Cartwright, 1958). Similar relief is found even at 90 fathoms near the edge of the continental shelf, at the western approaches to the English Channel (Cartwright & Stride, 1958). Pratje (1950) has shown that the occurrence and grade of loose sediment on the floor of the Channel as a whole is directly related to the velocity of the streams overhead.