Observed alongshore sandbar and shoreline variability at an open, fetch-limited beach

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hdl:2117/363952
Document typeConference lecture
Defense date2021
PublisherCoast and Ocean Collective
Rights accessOpen Access
This work is protected by the corresponding intellectual and industrial property rights.
Except where otherwise noted, its contents are licensed under a Creative Commons license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Spain
ProjectMORFODIAMICA DE COSTAS: INTERACCION DE PATRONES EN DIFERENTES ESCALAS (MINECO-CTM2015-66225-C2-1-P)
MORFODINAMICA DE PLAYAS PROTEGIDAS EN EL MEDITERRANEO FRENTE AL CAMBIO CLIMATICO: MODELADO (AEI-RTI2018-093941-B-C33)
MORFODINAMICA DE PLAYAS PROTEGIDAS EN EL MEDITERRANEO FRENTE AL CAMBIO CLIMATICO: MODELADO (AEI-RTI2018-093941-B-C33)
Abstract
andbars often display an alongshore variable morphology (crescentic bars), which is often mimicked at the shoreline (megacusps). The processes resulting in these patterns are not yet clear and particularly the coupling between sandbar and shoreline deserves more attention. This contribution presents 8 years of video observations on the dynamics of crescentic bars and megacusps, including coupling, at the open, fetch-limited beach of Castelldefels (Spanish Mediterranean coast). Wave conditions were propagated from the nearest wave buoy to the study site (10 m depth). Crescentic bars and megacusps were detected visually from video images, after which the barlines and shoreline were extracted to compute characteristics like wavelengths, amplitudes and alongshore migration rates. Finally, the bar-shoreline coupling was evaluated using cross-correlation. Crescentic bars were only observed when the sandbar- shoreline distance was at least 10 m. They developed during lower energetic waves with both oblique and shore-normal angles, whereas straightening occurred primarily during high-energetic obliquely-incident waves. Megacusps only developed in the presence of a crescentic bar and were less pronounced and dynamic compared to crescentic bars. During megacusps presence, a highly-significant coupling was present during 73% of the time but the relative phase varied, partly due to different alongshore migration rates of the two patterns.
CitationDe Swart, R.L. [et al.]. Observed alongshore sandbar and shoreline variability at an open, fetch-limited beach. A: IAHR Symposium on River, Coastal and Estuarine Morphodynamics. "RCEM 2021: abstracts". Auckland: Coast and Ocean Collective, 2021,
Publisher versionhttps://coastalhub.science/rcem-2021
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RCEM2021_RLdeSwart.pdf | Submitted abstract RCEM2021 | 110,1Kb | View/Open |