“…Few studies, however, have been done to characterize the clay distribution along the fluvial to marine transition zone in a coastal environment (e.g., Gugliotta et al., 2020). In addition, recent advances in understanding the origin and distribution of clay‐rich sediments indicate that clay properties, such as clay mineral content, assemblages, distribution, and depositional patterns, are too complex and generally a product of the source material, with insufficient correlation between specific clays and the depositional environment, to allow interpretation of environment based on clay properties alone (e.g., DeReuil & Birgenheier, 2019; Li & Schieber, 2018; Li et al., 2020). Other approaches show how the mineralogy of clays (not their cation composition), and their fraction of the sediment can be used as indicators of depositional environments to differentiate marine from non‐marine conditions (e.g., Gibbs, 1977; Griffin & Parrot, 1964; Lonnie, 1982), but this requires acquisition of sediment samples which are not always readily available and also have uncertainties in their interpretation (e.g., Knox et al., 2006).…”