2007 GSA Denver Annual Meeting (28–31 October 2007)

Paper No. 5
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

PROCESS SIGNATURES IN REGIONAL PATTERNS OF SHORELINE CHANGE ON ANNUAL TO SUB-ANNUAL TIME SCALES


LAZARUS, Eli, Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Duke University, 103 Old Chemistry Building, Box 90227, Durham, NC 27708, LIST, Jeffrey, U.S. Geological Survey, Woods Hole, MA 02543 and MURRAY, A. Brad, Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Duke University, 103 Old Chemistry Building, Box 90230, Durham, NC 27708, eli.lazarus@duke.edu

The morphologies of sediment-covered shorelines evolve over a continuum of time and spatial scales. Ephemeral, small-scale patterns (100 - 102 m alongshore) such as beach cusps and storm scarps are developed and reworked over days to weeks, typical of localized sediment cycling associated with cross-shore transport. Persistent, plan-view bumps in the shoreline (103 - 105 m), however, such as promontories, embayments, and capes tend to erode and accrete over years and decades—aggregate changes that recent theoretical and data-analysis findings attribute to alongshore sediment-transport processes. Shoreline perturbations set up gradients in alongshore sediment transport that vary with the approach-angle of deep-water incident waves; a high-angle (> ~45° in deep water) wave climate will tend to cause convex-seaward bumps to grow and concave-seaward embayments deepen, while a low-angle (> ~45°) wave climate will have an opposite, diffusive effect. Patterns of alongshore sediment flux thus affect a correlation between shoreline-position change and shoreline curvature that depends on whether high- or low-angle waves dominated the wave climate. Ongoing work on the northern North Carolina Outer Banks using lidar surveys demonstrates a significant negative correlation, strongest at large time (decadal) and spatial (km) scales, between position change and shoreline curvature, consistent with a low-angle-dominated regional incident wave climate over the last decade. With a set of vehicle-based alongshore transects taken monthly for three years along the same continuous, 60 km stretch of the North Carolina Outer Banks used in the lidar-based study, we document shoreline change, quantify alongshore patterns of erosion and deposition, and isolate signals diagnostic of cross-shore- and alongshore-transport processes evident at annual to sub-annual and storm time scales. Correlations between position change and shoreline curvature are consistent with the hypothesis that alongshore transport processes play a significant role in the observed shoreline change. However, on small space and time scales such correlations can arise for multiple reasons; cross-shore and swash-zone processes likely strongly influence shoreline shape on scales shorter than 12 months and smaller than 500 - 1000 m.