Title: ESYS 150 LECTURE 11 COASTAL PROCESSES
1ESYS 150LECTURE 11COASTAL PROCESSES
- Coastline
- Waves in general
- Waves on the coastline
- Human effects on the Coast
2COASTLINECOASTAL USRates of erosion on US
beaches
- Severely eroding (red) Most people want to
live on - Moderating eroding (orange) beach but it is
disappearing - Reasonably stable (purple) from most places.
3WAVESENERGY PULSEParticles rotate in place
- Particles rotate in the direction of the wave
front. - At the surface, the diameter of particle motion
H - Orbit decreases with depth 0 when z L/2
- Waves formed by frictional drag of wind on water
surface. - Wave height a function of wind velocity,
consistency, duration and fetch. - Can travel thousands of miles from where formed.
4WAVESENERGY PULSEParticles rotate in circles
- Involve both longitudinal and transverse motion.
As wave travels through water the particles
rotate in a clockwise fashion. - Depth of the water is greater than the height of
the waves. - Blue particles show that each particle travels in
a circle.
5WAVESSWELLS AND ROGUE WAVE
- Usually many different storms, producing waves of
different characteristics. They interfere with
each other to produce small swell. - b) When they become synchronized they can produce
huge waves that can overwhelm small boats. Waves
can have amplitudes of between 5 and 15 m.
6WAVES ON COASTLINEWHY WAVES BREAKWave moves
into shallow water
- At water depths less than 1/2 the wavelength
waves change shape. - Friction on the ocean floor causes particle
motion to go elliptical and the waves get larger. - Thus H increases and L decreases.
7WAVES ON COASTLINEWHEN WAVES BREAKSimple theory
(Miche 1944)
- In deep water when d/L gt 0.5 or d gt L/2 then only
the wavelength is important. - Breaking occurs when H/L 0.14 or (HL
17) - In shallow water, when d/L lt 0.05 or d lt L/20
then only the depth of the water is important. - Breaking occurs when H 0.8d or (d 1.3H)
- In practice H/d at breaking depends also on both
the wave steepness and the beach slope.
8WAVES ON THE COASTLINEZONES ON THE
BEACHFormation of actual breakers
- Schematic cross section showing deep-water waves
entering shallow water. - Wavelength decreases as wave height increases and
the wave breaks. - Note the transition, breaker, surf and swash
zones.
9WAVES ON COASTLINEWHY WAVES CURL
- In a breaking wave, circular rotating water
slowed at base. - Rolls forward at the top. Creates a curl.
10WAVES ON THE COASTLINESUMMER/ WINTER
BEACHESSummer
- Summer conditions at Boomer Beach, La Jolla.
- Summer storms less active, waves short
wavelength, small height. - Abundant small waves push off-shore sand up the
beach.
11WAVES ON COASTLINESUMMER/WINTER BEACHESWinter
- Active winter storms, long wavelength waves with
abundant energy. - Large breakers, large backwash, pulls the sand
off the beach.
12WAVES ON COASTLINEREAFRACTION OF WAVES AROUND A
POINTFalse Point, La Jolla
- View north of wave refraction around False Point.
- Wave refraction around a headland.
- Wave first entering shallow water slows down and
converges on - headland. Wave portion still in deep water races
ahead and stretches - out creating a bending process known as wave
refraction.
13WAVES ON COAST LINEREFRACTION OF WAVESDirection
of prevalent swell and Scripps Canyon control
structure of the waves at Blacks Beach.
14WAVES ON COAST LINEREFRACTION OF WAVESCreates
high wave heights north of canyon head
15WAVES ON COASTLINELONGSHORE DRIFTRiver of sand
- Schematic map of longshore drift. Waves run up
the beach at an angle but return to sea as a
perpendicular backwash. - Creates a longshore transport of water and sand
along the coast. - A river of sand.
16WAVES ON COASTLINESUBMARINE CANYONSCoast of San
Diego County.
- Two different cells.
- Silver Strand cell from Tijuana river sands
driven north by waves from summer hurricanes off
Mexico. - Oceanside cell is beach and sand moving south
pushed by waves from north Pacific winter storms. - The sand flow ends when it pours into La Jolla
Canyon - a submarine canyon.
17HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTDAMSMalibu Canyon Dam
- Dam built in 1925 was filled by sediment 13 years
later. - Coastal zone short of fresh water. Build dams
across rivers. - Dams also catch sand, cuts off beach supply,
reduces protection against erosion. Torrey Pines
beach losing sand. Eroding faster.
18HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTCLIFF PROTECTIONRetreating
cliffs in Solana Beach
- Condos have wonderful views but beach retreating
at 10 ft per 100 years. - Want to protect the beach from erosion. How?
19HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTCLIFF PROTECTIONConcrete
wall and rocks
- Sunset Cliffs San Diego. Protected by a cement
wall and riprap. - Waves erode underneath and around the structure.
- Also wall reflects waves hitting them. Rebounding
water surges power fully erode the beach. - Riprap reduces reflection but eventually waves
work way under the riprap. - Eventually have very serious problem
20HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTSEA WALLBuilt on beach to
provide protection
- A before the wall,
- B build he first wall - waves bounce off wall
erode the beach - C 2 - 40 years - all sand removed by waves which
work to undermine wall - D Later 10 - 60 years - build bigger seawall,
increases reflection, beach disappears again and
ocean much deeper. - Longshore drift can offset this
21HUMAN EFFECTS ON THE COASTGROINSShip Bottom New
Jersey
- Groins - short elongate mass perpendicular to
coast line to trap sand. - Interfere with longshore drift with deposition on
upside and erosion on downside. - What is the direction of longshore drift?
22HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTBREAKWATER Built parallel
to coast to provide protection
- Stops waves from hitting the beach. Sand is
deposited behind and on the upside of the
breakwater. - Needs permanent dredging to keep the harbor or
sheltered area open.
23HUMAN EFFECTS ON COASTJETTIESCreate harbor and
channels for boat passage.
- Need to be built out just the right length to
create a large enough tidal prism (in-and-out
volume) of seawater to keep them clear. - Extend well beyond the breaker zone and interfere
with longshore drift. - Have deposition on the upside and erosion on the
down-drift side.