PowerPoint Presentation - Geophysics 189 Natural Hazards - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

PowerPoint Presentation - Geophysics 189 Natural Hazards

Description:

Coastal Processes and Hazards – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:81
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: SusanB183
Learn more at: http://www.ees.nmt.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PowerPoint Presentation - Geophysics 189 Natural Hazards


1
Coastal Processes and Hazards
2
Outline
  • Why is this important?
  • Definitions
  • How waves work
  • Interaction at shoreline
  • Importance of beaches
  • Human impacts on beaches

3
Why is this important?
  • 70 of Earths surface is water
  • Means a lot of coastlines
  • In U.S. - 30 coastal states
  • Projection by 2010 75 of population will live
    within 75 km of coastline
  • 1,358 people/coastal mile
  • High concentration of people and property!

4
Possible Hazards
  • Already covered
  • Hurricanes, tsunami, noreasters
  • Discuss today
  • Waves, tides, erosion, sea level rise

5
Coastlines
  • Regions where land meets sea
  • Can be of different forms
  • Long sandy beaches
  • Rocky cliffs
  • Coral reefs

6
Sandy N. Carolina coastline
Rocky coastline of Maine
7
Waves and Tides
  • Key forces that act to alter coastlines
  • Important for erosion, moving material along coast

8
How waves work
  • Caused by wind blowing over water surface
  • Transfer energy from air to water
  • 5-20 km/hr breeze small (lt 1cm high) ripples
  • 30 km/hr full size waves

9
Wave height
  • Depends on
  • Wind speed
  • Direction of wind blowing
  • Length of water over which wind is blowing
  • Consistency of wind direction

10
What is Water Doing?
  • Particle of water rotates in place with circular
    orbit
  • Orbit decreases in size with depth

11
Orbital Motion
You probably have felt the same motion in the
waves!
12
Wave Description
  • Wavelength (L)
  • Wave Height
  • Period (T)
  • Related to velocity of the wave
  • VL/T
  • Typical T of few-20 sec, L of 6-600 m means V of
    3-30 m/s

13
Swells
  • Interference of many sets of waves
  • Usually related to storms, multiple storms
  • Occasionally constructive interference occurs
  • Produce very large waves (rouge waves)
  • Can sink ships, may impact shorelines

14
Waves Near Coastlines
  • 1st orbital motion changes to elliptical when
    depth is lt 1/2 L
  • Why? Friction with bottom

shallow-water wave
deep-water wave
15
Waves Near Coastlines
  • 2nd wave slows down, L gets smaller
  • Leads to more water, energy in shorter length
    taller waves

16
Waves Near Coastlines
  • 3rd at certain height (17 height to
    wavelength), wave is too steep and breaks
  • Topples forward, forms the bubbly, foamy stuff

17
Slope of Near-shore
  • Impacts wave breaks
  • If gently sloping bottom, waves break farther
    from shore
  • If steeply sloping bottom, waves break closer to
    shore
  • Rocky cliffs break directly on rocks with large
    force

18
Wave Refraction
  • As waves get closer to shore, they bend to a
    direction roughly parallel to shore
  • Wave refraction, similar to light
  • Important for areas with bays and headlands
  • Headlands water depth shallows quickly, waves
    slow and converge at this point
  • Bays water in center is deeper, area is more
    protected

19
Bending of wave crests due to refraction as waves
slow down in progressively more shallow water
depths
20
Wave refraction concentrates energy at headlands,
thereby causing increased erosion
Wave refraction decreases energy at bays, thereby
causing increased deposition
21
Longshore Drift
  • Waves arrive at small angle to shore, go up on
    beach at an angle
  • Moves sand grains (and people) at an angle
  • Very efficient at transporting sand to/from
    beaches

22
(No Transcript)
23
Beach
  • Shoreline made of sand/pebbles
  • Important for recreation, housing
  • Also as a natural barrier to absorb energy in
    breaking waves
  • Various beach processes affect how much beach is
    present during the year

24
General Beach Cycle
  • Summer
  • Generally fewer storms, lower wind speeds, waves
    with shorter L and height
  • Act to push offshore sand onshore, build wide,
    sandy beaches

25
  • Summer beach near San Diego, CA

26
  • Winter beach (same one) near San Diego, CA

Note sandy beach is gone, due to large storm waves
27
General Beach Cycle
  • Winter
  • More energetic storms, waves erode beach sand,
    carry offshore
  • With less sand, energetic waves can attack
    coastal features such as roads, houses

28
Human Impacts
  • Humans like to live near the beach!
  • Nice climate
  • Great views
  • Additional food sources
  • Want to minimize risk from big waves, hurricanes,
    erosion of cliffs and beaches

29
Human Impacts
  • In order to mitigate hazards, we build
  • Seawalls
  • Dams
  • Groins
  • Jetties
  • Structures have multiple impacts

30
Dams
  • Dam rivers that add water, sand into ocean
  • Many built to provide freshwater reservoirs for
    coastal communities
  • Problem sand in rivers adds to beach
    development. By cutting off this supply, adds to
    problem of shrinking beaches

31
Seawalls/Cliff Protection
  • Build structure for protection of beach or cliff
  • Changes beach dynamics
  • What happens?
  • Ocean waves break on wall because beach narrows
  • Steepens slope offshore, leads to larger waves
  • Can over time erode seawall or undercut base

32
Seawalls can cause beaches to disappear,
construction of new seawalls over time Also,
reduce attractiveness of coastline, property
values
33
Seawall, coastal GA
34
Groins and Jetties
  • Elongate mass (usually rock or concrete) built
    perpendicular to shoreline
  • Purpose keep sand on the beach
  • Problem longshore drift still occurs
  • Leads to deposition on 1 side, erosion on other
    side

35
(No Transcript)
36
Jetty in NJ - note longshore drift is from left
to right here
Groin leads to deposition updrift, erosion
downdrift
37
Beach Replenishment
  • Actively transporting sand onto a beach
  • Usually pump it from offshore
  • Can be very expensive (millions/mile of beach)
  • May have to be repeated every year
  • Examples Waikiki, HI Miami, FL

38
(No Transcript)
39
1981 Miami Beach
40
(No Transcript)
41
Next Time
  • Stream/River Processes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com