A major flood event occurred within the drainage basin of the Changjiang River in June-August, 1998. Survey over the East China Sea adjacent to the Changjiang River estuary shows that during the flood the turbid water (with a suspended sediment concentration of higher than 10 mg l-1) °°′reached 123E. Stratification of the concentration layers was present near 12215E, with the concentration in the bottom layer being 3 times that in the upper layer, in response to sediment °°settling processes. The concentration is the lowest in the area of 126E~127E, representing a characteristic of the Kuroshio water. Although there was some expansion of the turbid water extension compared with the winter situations with low freshwater discharges, the suspended sediment does not appear to disperse towards the northeast from the Changjiang River. Further, several secondary high suspended sediment concentration centers were present on the East China Sea continental shelf, which may result from resuspension of the seabed sediment or advection of seawater containing suspended matter. In order to understand the processes of fine-grained sediment transport/deposition and their impact on the flux of chemical constituents on the shelf, further studies on the hydrodynamics, temperature, salinity and nutrient characteristics are required.