The study of vertical particle dynamics in the highly turbid Gironde Estuary has shown intense cycles of sedimentation and resuspension at both diurnal and neap-spring time scales. Fluid mud, with suspended particulate matter (SPM) concentrations between 50 and 500 g liter(-1), has been observed during neap tides. Vertical profiles of biogeochemical parameters have been measured in the fluid mud. Anoxic conditions have been detected when SPM concentration exceeded 50 g liter(-1) in the upstream and 140 g liter(-1) in the downstream parts of the maximum turbidity zone (MTZ). At the downstream parr of the MTZ, anoxic fluid mud was partitioned into denitrification layer (SPM = 140-250 g liter(-1)), intensively reworked at the tidal time scale, and by an Mn(IV)-reduction layer (SPM > 250 g liter(-1)) preferentially reworked at the neap-spring time scale. Due to the alternation of sedimentation and resuspension periods, most of the sediment experienced oxic/anoxic oscillations throughout the neap-spring cycle. Fluid mud resuspension occurred without any observable incidence on the surface-water oxygenation. An increase in total alkalinity was found in the fluid mud, due to both anaerobic respiration and a carbonate dissolution coupled to aerobic respiratory CO(2) generation. This phenomenon significantly affected the inorganic carbon budget of the estuary, increasing the HCO(3)(-) input to the coastal ocean and reducing the CO(2) flux to the atmosphere. An accumulation of labile-dissolved organic carbon observed in the fluid mud suggests that these oscillations result in an acceleration of particulate organic matter (POM) decomposition. in the Gironde MTZ, a net loss of refractory land-derived POM occurs. This system acts as an efficient oxic/suboxic "'fluidized bed reactor," similar to mobile deltaic muds.