See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: Response of Coastal Environments to Accelerated Sea Level Rise
Abstract:
Radiometricaly-constrained sediment budgets for these barriers are used to determine the long-term shoreline retreat and to examine the contributions of different erosion mechanisms (i.e. littoral drift, fluvial sediment input, subsidence, hurricane washover, and offshore sand transport). The late Holocene backbarrier sedimentary architecture of these systems is similar: thin amalgamated washover deposits overlaying bay mud. Over longer timescales (i.e. centuries to millennia), hurricane washover has been minor. Instead, sand eroded from these barriers is mainly sequestered within the shoreface and tidal deltas. The development of numerical models to predict coastal response to accelerated sea level rise and climate controlled variations in sediment supply hinges on developing a better understanding of how and where sand is sequestered.
See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: Response of Coastal Environments to Accelerated Sea Level Rise