Abstract
The behaviour of subtidal sandbars can be strongly influenced by the introduction of sand nourishments in the coastal system. This study focuses on the impact of nourishments on subtidal bar behaviour at spatio-temporal scales beyond a single nourishment project. It aims to determine the long-term behaviour of subtidal sandbars along an entire coastal cell, taking into account both the unnourished and nourished regime, and covering various types of nourishments. The analysis is based on over 50 years of sandbar evolution along the Delfland coast, a 17-km long coastal cell at the Dutch North Sea coastline protected by groynes and maintained with frequent sand nourishments. Observations reveal clearly different sandbar behaviour during the unnourished (first 20 years) and nourished periods of the dataset. Introduction of the first beach nourishments (nourished sand primarily placed at the subaerial beach) was found to stimulate sandbar development along previously unbarred sections of the coast. Shoreface nourishments (nourished sand placed at the seaward face of the pre-existing subtidal sandbar) tended to migrate shoreward rapidly at a rate of 20 to 60 m/year at this coast, thereby forcing the pre-existing sandbar to weld to the dry beach. An abrupt transition of sandbar dynamics was observed following a major nourishment operation (∼ 37.5 Mm3 of nourished sand) that covered the entire coastal cell. A new, shallow sandbar formed with a degree of alongshore variability that was unprecedented at the Delfland coast over the full study period. These results imply that individual nourishments can influence the formation and migration of individual sandbars, while continued nourishments can fundamentally change long-term sandbar dynamics along an entire coastal cell.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1-12 |
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | Geomorphology |
| Volume | 313 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 15 Jul 2018 |
Funding
MR was supported by STW Grant 12686 : Nature-driven Nourishments of Coastal Systems (NatureCoast), S1: Coastal safety. BH was supported by ERC Advanced Grant 291206 : Nearshore Monitoring and Modeling (NEMO). MdS was supported by NWO Grant 15058 : Feeding Starved Coasts By Natural Morphological Diffusivity. TP was funded by the Dutch Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) under contract 016.Veni.171.101 : Spawning sand from sea to land. The authors acknowledge Jantien Rutten and Dirk-Jan Walstra for their contributions to this work.
Keywords
- Alongshore variability
- Nearshore sandbars
- Sand Motor
- Sand nourishment