Metals introduced to rivers bind to fine sediment and are transported to seabeds where a variety of complex sediment transport processes take over. Some of these metals can be hazardous to the marine biosphere, and it is therefore crucial to quantify the magnitude of these processes to understand where sediment containing toxic metals is accumulating. For this study, 25 surface sediment samples were collected from Tahsis Inlet, Nootka Sound, BC. An understudied region, Tahsis Inlet is a steep, narrow fjord with high tidal energy and is characterized by a sidewall river delta, a mid-inlet passage to another fjord, and two rivers at its head. Sediment samples were analyzed for grain size and concentration of a suite of 22 metals. Grain size distributions in Tahsis Inlet varied widely from very coarse (rocks, gravel, sand) around the sidewall delta to very fine (silt and clay) at both ends of the inlet. There were distinct patterns between different types of metals, where certain metals tended to co-vary along the sampling transect. Additionally, the toxic anthropogenic metals, arsenic and mercury, were detected at several of the Tahsis Inlet stations. The connection between metal concentrations and local logging and wood processing activities, physical transport via currents and landslide deposition, and biological processes will be described.