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INTRODUCTION TO BEACHES & COASTS GEOL 1033 (Lesson 32) Ppt file 103-29 Coastal Classifications • There are many old coastal classifications • Plate tectonic classification is newest: – – – – Collision coast (like southern BC) Trailing-edge coast (Atlantic Canada) MAJOR LITHOSPHERIC PLATES, R Translational (= transform-fault) coast (San Andreas Fault Zone) TRANSFORM FAULTS, & TRENC Marginal sea coast (Sea of Japan) • Secondary influences involve: – – – – Sediment supply Glaciers Climate Hydrodynamics (waves & tides) What is a Beach? • Loose, unconsolidated sediment: – – – – – Usually sand (1/16 mm to 2 mm) Silts & clays are washed (winnowed) away Can be pebbles, cobbles, etc. Water-borne Well-sorted (narrow size range) • Beachface slopes seaward – Coarser sediments = steeper slopes – Finer sediments = gentler slopes • Located between – Mean low tide level & – Landward change in • Physiography • Vegetation • Effective (reach of) waves and tides Beach Subdivisions • Foreshore: – – Beachface Low-tide terrace • Backshore: – Where berms are located • Offshore (beyond beach): – Offshore bars Beach Equilibrium Profiles • Generalized profiles below are equilibrium profiles. • Profiles adjust to disruptions/changes over periods of weeks. • Storm beach profiles: – – – – – – Typical of winter & after storms Erosional Coarser grained sediment Steeper slopes Large, high berms Narrow backshore • Swell beach profiles: – – – – – – Typical of fair-weather conditions Depositional Finer grained sediment Gentler slopes Small, lower berms Broad backshore Sand Spits • Linear extension downdrift from: – Mainland beaches – Island beaches • Extend into mouth of a bay bay Barrier Islands • Found along – Microtidal coasts – Mesotidal coasts • Composed basically of – Beach sands oceanward, – Salt marshes landward, & – Windblown dune sands in the middle Tidal Flats & Salt Marshes • Tidal flats – – – – Either sandy or muddy Somewhat protected areas Low and mid-tide range No vegetation • Salt marshes – – – – Fine-grained sediments Protected coastal areas High intertidal range Salt-tolerant vegetation • Southerly = mangrove trees • Northerly = grasses dominate World Distribution of Marshes New England/Maritime saltmarsh mangrove coasts END OF FILE BEACH PROFILE OF EQUILIBRIUM • The generalized profile below is a typical response of shoreline sediments to coastal processes, etc. • It will change or adjust over periods of only weeks if conditions change, e. g., storm versus fair weather conditions or "storm profile" versus. "swell profile" Nearshore ------------- Beach face Sand Spits • Develop downdrift from beaches • Linear extension from – Mainland beaches – Islands • Over a platform • Into the mouth of a bay • Protected bay/lagoonal area behind develops: – Tidal flats – Salt marshes – Fills in with sediments eventually bay Barrier Islands • Found along microtidal & mesotidal coasts • 3 origins: – Coastal ridge embayment associated with sea-level rise – Breached spits – Wave-built offshore shoals emerge • Complex environmental settings – – – – – – – Beach Dune field Salt marshes Tidal flats Tidal channels Spits Lagoons