Beach Formation & Classification

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BSc Degree Marine Biology (217 - Ecology of Shallow Water Marine Habitats) Note on Beach Formation & Classification, created by Madison Burt on 24/04/2014.
Madison Burt
Note by Madison Burt, updated more than 1 year ago
Madison Burt
Created by Madison Burt almost 10 years ago
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Scheme by Short & Wright 1983

Dissipative  High wave energy - good supply of nutrients and oxygen Flatter profile Finer sand (0.2mm) - according to Wentworth scale Stable, more diverse Could have greater tidal range

Reflective Lower wave energy Steeper profiles (5-10 degrees) Coarse sand Less stable, less diverse Could have smaller tidal range

IntermediateOver 70% of beaches in New South Wales

Sandy Beach Formation All that is required for beach formation is the sediment (sand) and a transport mechanism (wave action) The sand is mostly from erosion from land (e.g. volcanic ejecta, ice, rivers, coastal erosion) Sand is mostly quartz or silica (land) and white beaches are from calcium carbonate (shells/coral etc) Particle size and density affects transport potential Distance of travel depends also on wave energy (which in turn depends on wind strength, duration & fetch) As wave energy increases more and more, and larger and larger material is transported and as wave energy decreases material is deposited

Rating System to give Beaches a Score Wave action - including their frequency, strength and size Surf zone width % of fine sand Particle size Depth of reduced (anoxic) layer Animals with stable burrows - presence or absence suggests something about the stability of the beach

Reflective can turn into dissipative in some places. Amount of fine sand can vary.

Ranks0 = Sheltered20 = Exposed

Dean's ParameterΩ = Hb/WsT Hb = wave breaker height Ws = sediment fall velocity T = wave period

Beach State IndexBSI = log ([HbM/WsTE] +1) M = max. tidal range E = constant - max. world equilibrium tide

SedimentGrain size - described using Wentworth ScaleUses median grain size, most beaches = fine - coarse sand (0.125 - 1mm)Sediment size has effect on reduced layer. Well sorted & rounded particles allow deeper penetration of water (which carries nutrients & O2)

Porosity Beaches filter large volumes of water Filtration Increases with wave action Greater on reflective beaches Greater if tidal range is small (greater the tidal range, the less each part gets of water & thus O2 & nutrients)

Organic InputDissolved organic matter (DOM)Particulate organic matter (POM) - in suspension e.g. fragments of kelpInputs: filtration through sediment (DOM & small POM), decomposition of larger POM on strand line

Oxygen Decreases into sediment Dissipative Transition zone - 'redox potential discontinuity' as move from oxic to anoxic (not always a clear line, can be gradient) - changes with wave action, temp, organic input

Formation

Dissipative vs Reflective

How are Beaches Classified?

Quantitative Approaches

Physico-chemical Featues

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