I suspect that deltas are one of the more dynamic parts of the natural environment. Some of them, at the mouth of rivers with large flow and sediment supply, were naturally quite dynamic but human impacts are making more of them change.
Probably the most dynamic delta is the Huang He in China (the yellow river) which drains the poorly-consolidated loess plateau. It has built 2,200km^2 of new land since 1855. On the other hand the Aswan Dam cut sediment supply to the Nile by 98%, leading to rapid coastal erosion. Sediment loss on the Mississippi is estimated at about 70% and it too is suffering land loss. A lot of very large cities are sited on river deltas, particularly in Asia, and there is concern about their future if the present rate of seal level rise continues. I imagine there will be a lot of remedial engineering done.
[BTW guess who wrote an undergrad essay on anthropogenic influences on river deltas?]