Title: The Dynamic Shoreline
1The Dynamic Shoreline
2Breaking waves provide the energy that changes
the shape and texture of the beach deposits.
11-1
Coastal Water Movement
- As waves shoal (touch bottom) in shallow water
celerity decreases, wavelength decreases, wave
height increases, waves become less stable and
refraction occurs. - Refraction is the bending of waves towards
shallower water so that they break almost
parallel to the shore. - Waves become unstable and break in very shallow
water. - The beach is the part of the land that touches
the sea. It can be divided into the Off shore,
Near shore (breaker zone, surf zone, swash zone),
and the Back Shore
311-1
Coastal Water Movement
- Position of the divisions of the beach varies
with the tides, advancing landward with high tide
and retreating seaward with low tide.
4Waves generate longshore currents that flow
parallel to the beach and rip currents that flow
perpendicularly to the beach.
11-1
Coastal Water Movement
- Angle of wave approach is the acute angle (less
than 90o) between the wave crest and the beach. - The direction of longshore current varies with
the direction of wave approach. - Longshore currents can also be generated by wave
set-up. - Where two opposing longshore currents collide,
they form a swift, narrow, seaward rip current.
5Beach sediments are moved by currents and waves,
especially breakers.
11-2
Beaches
- A beach profile is a cross section of the beach
along a line that is perpendicular to the
shoreline. - A swell profile is concave upward with a wide,
broad berm (relatively flat backshore) and steep
intertidal beach face. - A storm profile displays erosion of the berm and
a broad flat intertidal beach face. - A sand budget is the balance between sediment
added to and sediment eroded from the beach.
6Sand dunes are formed by winds blowing sand
landward from the dry part of the beach.
11-3
Coastal Dunes
- Well developed dunes typically have a sinusoidal
profile with the primary dune at the landward
edge of the beach and possible secondary dunes
located farther inland. - Vegetation on the dunes traps windblown sand on
their downwind side and promotes dune growth and
stability. - Blowouts are wind-scoured breaks in the dune or
depressions in the dune ridge and commonly occur
if vegetation is destroyed. - Dunes are best developed if sand is abundant,
onshore winds are moderately strong and
persistent, the tidal range is large and the
beach is wide and gently sloping.
711-3
Coastal Dunes
- Sand saltates (bounces) up the windward side of
the dune, collects in the wind-shadow at the top
and periodically slides down the leeward face of
the dune when the accumulation of sand becomes
over-steepenedresulting in dune migration. - Wave erosion of sand dunes transports sand
offshore and creates a steep scarp at the base of
the dune. - Dunes act as a natural barrier and prevent inland
flooding. - Human activity that damages vegetation leads to
dune destruction by blowouts and washover by
storm waves.
8Barrier islands are islands composed of sediment
that parallel the coast and form where sand
supply is abundant and a broad sea floor slopes
gently seaward.
11-4
Barrier Islands
- The islands are separated from the mainland by
shallow bodies of water which are connected to
the ocean through tidal inlets. - A series of distinct environments develop across
the island parallel the beach and include the
nearshore zone, dune field, back-island flats and
salt marshes. - Barrier islands are created in many ways
including sand ridges isolated by rising sea
level, Sand spits breached during a storm,
vertical growth and emergence of longshore sand
bars.
911-4
Barrier Islands
- As sea level rises, barrier islands migrate
landward as washover transports sediments from
the seaward side of the island to the landward
side.
10Storm surge is the high water created by the
accumulation of wind-blown water against the
shore and the mound of water generated by the low
atmospheric pressure of the storm.
11-4
Barrier Islands
- The elevated water level allows waves to reach
much farther inland than usual, especially if the
storm surge coincides with a high tide. - Waves more easily breach the island and wash over
lower areas. - New tidal channels may form during a storm surge.
11A sea cliff is an abrupt rise of the land from
sea level.
11-5
Cliffed Coasts
- A sea cliff is most vulnerable to erosion at its
base because waves that slam against the cliff
compress air inside cracks which expands
violently, sediment is hurled against the cliff
by the waves, and sea water dissolve some rock
types. - When sufficient rock at the base of the cliff has
been removed, the upper part of the cliff
collapses. - Collapsed material protects the base of the sea
cliff from additional erosion until it is
destroyed and removed.
1211-5
Cliffed Coasts
- Rate at which the cliff recedes is dependent
upon - Composition and durability of cliff material.
- Joints, fractures, faults and other weaknesses in
the cliff material. - Amount of precipitation.
- Steepness of the cliff.
- The wave-cut platform is the gentle sloping area
in front of the sea cliff that was produced by
sea-cliff retreat.
13A delta is an emergent accumulation of sediment
deposited at the mouth of a river as it flows
into a standing body of water.
11-6
Deltas
- Deltas were named after the Greek letter delta ?.
- The three major areas of a delta are delta plain
,delta front and prodelta. - In cross section, a deltas deposits can be
divided into three sets of beds topset beds,
foreset beds, and bottomset beds. - As sediment accumulates the delta expands seaward
with foreset beds burying bottomset beds and
topset beds covering foreset beds.
1411-6
Deltas
- Shape of the delta can be altered by tides, waves
and river deposition. - Reduction in the supply of sediment to a delta
results in delta erosion and subsidence as the
sediments of the delta compact.
15Coastlines are desirable areas for human
habitation, but human activity conflicts with the
dynamic state of coastal systems.
11-7
Impact of People on the Coastline
- Humans try to stabilize the coastline in two
ways by interfering with longshore sand
transport, and by redirecting wave energy to
prevent erosion. - Preventing of sand drift involves jetties and
groins. - Redirecting wave energy involves breakwaters and
seawalls. - Beach nourishment with sand is expensive and
temporary. - An increase in sea level from global warming will
cause more land to be flooded and threaten more
coastal buildings.