Charlotte F.K. Uphues , Graziela Miot da Silva , Arnold van Rooijen , Patrick A. Hesp
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Accurately estimating sediment transport rates is essential for predicting shoreline changes and guiding coastal management strategies. While existing longshore transport models primarily assume alongshore uniform sandy shorelines, the reality is usually more complex. Many coastal environments exhibit natural features and engineered structures that challenge these models by altering sediment transport and morphodynamic processes. This study presents observations from an extensive field campaign at the Cape Dombey headland in Robe, South Australia, incorporating a co-located acoustic current meter and sediment profiler to examine sediment bypassing during summer and winter. Offshore and nearshore wave characteristics and water levels were measured, with nearshore wave heights ranging from 0.5 m in summer to >2.5 m during winter storms. Statistical analysis revealed wave refraction, diffraction, and breaking over a submerged headland extension as the main drivers for wave transformation around the headland. Three distinct hydrodynamic regimes were identified, characterized by specific current directions and sediment transport rates around the headland. A novel conceptual model for headland bypassing is proposed, describing these regimes and identifying sediment transport patterns over event time scales. Sediment transport rates under swell-dominant (Regime 2) and sea-dominant (Regime 3) conditions were up to 30 and 40 times higher than during calm conditions (Regime 1). Our conceptual model builds upon existing models by providing a detailed description of headland bypassing mechanisms under various hydrodynamic forcing conditions. This study advances understanding of sediment transport around headlands in high-energy environments and provides an adaptable framework for measuring and analyzing headland bypassing in other coastal settings.
期刊介绍:
Marine Geology is the premier international journal on marine geological processes in the broadest sense. We seek papers that are comprehensive, interdisciplinary and synthetic that will be lasting contributions to the field. Although most papers are based on regional studies, they must demonstrate new findings of international significance. We accept papers on subjects as diverse as seafloor hydrothermal systems, beach dynamics, early diagenesis, microbiological studies in sediments, palaeoclimate studies and geophysical studies of the seabed. We encourage papers that address emerging new fields, for example the influence of anthropogenic processes on coastal/marine geology and coastal/marine geoarchaeology. We insist that the papers are concerned with the marine realm and that they deal with geology: with rocks, sediments, and physical and chemical processes affecting them. Papers should address scientific hypotheses: highly descriptive data compilations or papers that deal only with marine management and risk assessment should be submitted to other journals. Papers on laboratory or modelling studies must demonstrate direct relevance to marine processes or deposits. The primary criteria for acceptance of papers is that the science is of high quality, novel, significant, and of broad international interest.