2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Underlying Paleochannels Facilitate Barrier Progradation: Bogue Banks, North Carolina

148-17 Underlying Paleochannels Facilitate Barrier Progradation: Bogue Banks, North Carolina



Sunday, 5 October 2008
George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall E
Emily A. Timmons, Institute of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 3431 Arendell Street, Morehead City, NC 28557, E. Lynne Harden, Earth and Planetary Sciences Department, University of California Santa Cruz, Earth and Marine Sciences Building, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, Christopher Freeman, Geodynamics, LLC, 152 Hawthorne Drive, Pine Knoll Shores, NC 28512, Gregory Rudolph, Carteret County Shore Protection Office, Emerald Isle, NC 28594 and Antonio B. Rodriguez, Institute of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 3431 Arendell St, Morehead City, NC 28557
Areas of the Outer Banks that were progradational during the Holocene spatially correlate with underlying channel forms. This is especially evident along Bogue Banks, North Carolina. Here, two different types of barrier island geomorphology are observed. Pine Knoll shores and Emerald Isle are the widest sections of the barrier, ranging from around 0.9-1.3 km in width. In both areas ridge and swale topography is observed which indicates progradation. Indian Beach, which lies between these areas of progradation does not exhibit ridge and swale topography and is the thinnest section of the island at around 0.2-0.4 km in width. Ground penetrating radar data were collected along transects of the barrier in these three locations. Both Pine Knoll shores and Emerald Isle exhibit seaward-dipping reflectors, which indicate seaward accretion of the barrier. Indian Beach shows reflectors that accrete vertically, indicating this section of the island to be aggradational. Seismic data taken in the sound behind Bogue Banks and offshore of Pine Knoll shores corroborates the presence and spatial correlation of paleochannels to the progradational areas. Sediment from these paleochannels was likely reworked as sea level rose throughout the mid Holocene, allowing for the creation of a progradational sequence due to the abundant sediment source that the channel provided. This could be a possible explanation for the progradational sequences in Pine Knoll shores and Emerald Isle, versus the aggradational area that is evident in Indian Beach where underlying paleochannels are not found. Currently, many areas of the Outer Banks that show a Holocene episode of progradation are erosional hotspots. Future efforts will examine the cause of this transition.