Chapter 10: Beaches, Shoreline Processes and The Coastal Ocean
Chapter 10: Beaches, Shoreline Processes and The Coastal Ocean
Chapter 10: Beaches, Shoreline Processes and The Coastal Ocean
Table 10.1 Characteristics of beaches affected by light and heavy wave activity
Blank Light wave activity Heavy wave activity
(small waves) (large waves)
Berm/longshore bars Berm is built at the expense of Longshore bars are built at the
the longshore bars expense of the berm
Wave energy Low wave energy (non-storm High wave energy (storm
conditions) conditions)
Time span Long time span (weeks or Short time span (hours or days)
months)
Characteristics Creates summertime beach: Creates wintertime beach: rocky,
sandy, wide berm, steep beach narrow berm, flattened beach
face Face
Movement Parallel to the Shoreline
• Longshore current—zigzag
movement of water along
shore
• Refracting waves in surf zone
• Longshore currents travel at
speeds up to 4 k m (2.5 miles)
ilo eters
per hour
Movement Parallel to the Shoreline
• Longshore Drift
• Also called longshore
transport, beach drift, or
littoral drift
• Transports beach sediment in a
zigzag fashion in the direction
of the longshore current
• Occurs in surf zone
Longshore Drift
• Well-developed cliffs
• Exist where tectonic uplift of coast
occurs
Two Major • U.S. Pacific coast is one example.
Types of
Shores Depositional Shores
• Tombolo
• Sand bar that connects an island to
the mainland
• Barrier islands
• Long offshore sand deposits that
parallel the coast
Depositional Coast Features
Barrier Islands
Changing Sea
• Can be caused by:
• Formation or destruction of inland lakes
• Sea floor spreading rate changes
Level • Formation or melting of glaciers
• Thermal expansion or contraction of
seawater
Pleistocene Epoch
and Today
• From about 2.6 million to 10,000
years ago, a series of four ice ages
affected Earth.
• Collectively called the “Ice Age”
• Sea level was at least 120 meters
(400 feet) below today’s sea level.
• If all remaining ice on Earth melted
today, sea level would rise another
70 meters (230 feet).
Hard Stabilization
• Similar to groin
• Built perpendicular to shore
• Built in pairs
• Built to protect harbor entrances
Effect of
Jetties and
Groins
Breakwaters
• Destructive to environment
• Designed to armor coastline and
protect human developments
• One large storm can remove beach
• Wave activity eventually
undermines seawall structure; need
continual repair or will collapse
Seawall
Damage
Alternatives to Hard Stabilization
• Three major alternatives
• Construction restrictions
• Beach replenishment
• Relocation
• Construction restrictions
• Simplest alternative
• Limit building near shorelines
• Paradoxically, National Flood Insurance Program encouraged construction.
Alternatives to Hard Stabilization
• Beach replenishment
• Sand added to
beach/longshore current
• Expensive; costs between
$5 and $10 per cubic yard
• Sand must be dredged
from elsewhere.
Alternatives • Relocation
to Hard
• Move structures rather than protect them
in areas of erosion
• Can allow humans to live in natural
of Coastal
• Northern Hemisphere—path curves northward
on western coasts and southward on eastern
coasts
Waters • Opposite in Southern Hemisphere
Characteristics of Coastal
Waters
• Chesapeake Bay
• Slightly stratified estuary
• Large seasonal changes in salinity,
temperature, and dissolved oxygen
• Maximum freshwater river flow in spring
Estuaries and Human
Activities
• Chesapeake Bay
• Waters may become anoxic from
May through August
• Major kills of commercially
important blue crabs, oysters, and
other bottom-dwelling organisms
• Increased nutrients from sewage
and agriculture causing algal
blooms and environmental issues
Lagoons
Seas
behind volcanic island arcs
• Mediterranean Sea
• Caribbean Sea
• Remnant of ancient Tethys Sea
• Shallow and narrow connection to Atlantic
Ocean and Black Sea
Mediterranean • Strait of Gibraltar
• Bosporus
Sea • Underwater sill separates Mediterranean into
two major basins
• Sill restricts flow, resulting in strong
currents
Mediterranean Sea
• Mediterranean Circulation
• Unique pattern caused by Middle East heat
• Large surface inflow from Atlantic Ocean to replace
evaporated surface water flows along north African
coast, spreads
Mediterranean
• Remaining Atlantic water flows eastward to Cyprus.
• Water sinks and becomes Mediterranean
Intermediate Water.
Issues Facing
to surface
• Generally saturated
• Can be freshwater or coastal
Coastal • Coastal wetlands occur along margins of costal
waters, including estuaries, lagoons, and
Wetlands marginal seas
• Include swamps, tidal flats, coastal
marshes, and bayous
Types of Coastal
Wetlands
• Salt marshes
• Between 30 and 65 degrees latitude
• Support salt-tolerant grasses and
other halophytic low-lying plants
• Along many coasts
Types of Coastal
Wetlands
• Mangroves
• Tropics below 30 degrees latitude
• Salt-tolerant mangrove trees,
shrubs, and palms
• Tall tripod-like root systems
• Caribbean, Florida, and Southeast
Asia
Distribution
of Salt
Marshes and
Mangroves
Characteristics of
Coastal Wetlands
Wetlands
W P) in 1986.
• Future sea level rise predicted to exacerbate
wetland loss.
Serious Loss
of Valuable
Wetlands