Morphodynamics of shoreface-connected ridges

A. Falques*, D. Calvete, H. E. De Swart, N. Dodd

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

A morphodynamic model is developed and analyzed to gain fundamental understanding on the basic physical mechanisms responsible for the characteristics of shoreface-connected sand ridges observed in some coastal seas. These alongshore rhythmic bedforms have a horizontal length-scale of order 10 km. It is found that the positive feedback between the topographic disturbances of a sloping bottom and the subsequent deflection of the mean coastal current is the main cause of the ridges. To be effective, this mechanism needs an averaged sediment transport mainly due to wave stirring during storms and an averaged current driven by pressure gradients rather than surface stresses. Even in the presence of significant tidal currents, their origin - related to the mean current instead of tidal oscillation - is essentially different from that of tidal sand banks.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCoastal Engineering 1998
PublisherASCE
Pages2851-2864
Number of pages14
ISBN (Print)9780784404119
Publication statusPublished - 1998
EventProceedings of the 1998 26th International Conference on Coastal Engineering, ICCE-98 - Copenhagen, Denmark
Duration: 22 Jun 199826 Jun 1998

Conference

ConferenceProceedings of the 1998 26th International Conference on Coastal Engineering, ICCE-98
CityCopenhagen, Denmark
Period22/06/9826/06/98

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