Short- and medium-term response to storms on three Mediterranean coarse-grained beaches

被引:22
|
作者
Grottoli, Edoardo [1 ]
Bertoni, Duccio [2 ]
Ciavola, Paolo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ferrara, Dept Phys & Earth Sci, Ferrara, Italy
[2] Univ Pisa, Dept Earth Sci, Pisa, Italy
关键词
Beach recovery; Shoreline rotation; Beach nourishment; Mixed beach; Storm impact; Microtidal beach; MARINA DI PISA; GRAVEL BEACH; MIXED SAND; MARKED PEBBLES; CLASTIC BEACHES; XBEACH-G; SEDIMENT DYNAMICS; INTENSITY SCALE; ATLANTIC COAST; NEW-ZEALAND;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2017.08.007
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
The storm response of three Italian coarse-grained beaches was investigated to better understand the morphodynamics of coarse-clastic beaches in a microtidal context. Two of the studied sites are located on the eastern side of the country (Portonovo and Sirolo) and the third one (Marina di Pisa) is on the western side. Portonovo and Sirolo are mixed sand and gravel beaches where the storms approach from two main directions, SE and NE. Marina di Pisa is a coarse-grained, gravel-dominated beach, exposed to storms driven by SW winds. Gravel nourishments were undertaken in recent years on the three sites. Beach topography was monitored measuring the same network of cross sections at a monthly (i.e. short-term) to seasonal frequency (i.e. medium term). Geomorphic changes were examined before and after storm occurrences by means of profile analyses and shoreline position evaluations. The beach orientation and the influence of hard structures are the main factors controlling the transport and accumulation of significant amount of sediments and the consequent high variability of beach morphology over the medium-term. For Marina di Pisa, storms tend to accumulate material towards the upper part of the beach with no shoreline rotation and no chance to recover the initial configuration. Sirolo and Portonovo showed a similar behaviour that is more typical of pocket beaches. Both beaches show shoreline rotation after storms in a clockwise or counter-clockwise direction according to the incoming wave direction. The wider and longer beach at Sirolo allows the accumulation of a thin layer of sediment during storms, rather than at Portonovo where, given its longshore and landward boundaries, the beach material tends to accumulate in greater thickness. After storms, Sirolo and especially Portonovo can quickly recover the initial beach configuration, as soon as another storm of comparable energy approaches from the opposite direction of the previous one. Large morphological variations after the storm on mixed sand and gravel beaches do not necessarily mean a slower recovery of surface topography and shoreline position. Considering that all the three beaches were recently nourished with gravel, it emerged that the differences between the nourishment and the native material, in terms of size and composition, seem to have an important influence on the dynamics of the sediment stock, Considering that recent studies have remarked the high abrasion rate of gravel, further understanding of the evolution of nourishment material with time is needed. The peculiar behaviour of gravel material artificially added to an originally sandy beach suggests the need to modify the widely used classification of Jennings and Shulmeister (2002) adding a fourth beach typology, which could represent human-altered beaches. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:738 / 748
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Short- and medium-term grain size changes in deltaic beaches (Ebro Delta, NW Mediterranean)
    Guillen, J
    Palanques, A
    SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 1996, 101 (1-2) : 55 - 67
  • [3] Implementation of Short- and Medium-Term Earthquake Forecasts
    Console, Rodolfo
    Yamaoka, Koshun
    Zhuang, Jiancang
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICS, 2012, 2012
  • [4] The COPD Assessment Test (CAT): Short- and Medium-term Response to Pulmonary Rehabilitation
    Dodd, James W.
    Marns, Phillippa L.
    Clark, Amy L.
    Ingram, Karen A.
    Fowler, Ria P.
    Canavan, Jane L.
    Patel, Mehul S.
    Kon, Samantha S. C.
    Hopkinson, Nicholas S.
    Polkey, Michael I.
    Jones, Paul W.
    Man, William D-C
    COPD-JOURNAL OF CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE, 2012, 9 (04) : 390 - 394
  • [5] Short- and medium-term effects of three fire fighting chemicals on the properties of a burnt soil
    Couto-Vazquez, A.
    Gonzalez-Prieto, S. J.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2006, 371 (1-3) : 353 - 361
  • [6] Short- and medium-term efficacy of specific hydrotherapy in inherited ichthyosis
    Bodemer, C.
    Bourrat, E.
    Mazereeuw-Hautier, J.
    Boralevi, F.
    Barbarot, S.
    Bessis, D.
    Blanchet-Bardon, C.
    Bourdon-Lanoy, E.
    Stalder, J. -F.
    Ribet, V.
    Guerrero, D.
    Sibaud, V.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, 2011, 165 (05) : 1087 - 1094
  • [7] Interpretable Modeling for Short- and Medium-Term Electricity Demand Forecasting
    Hirose, Kei
    FRONTIERS IN ENERGY RESEARCH, 2021, 9
  • [8] Integrated short- and medium-term underground mine production scheduling
    Nehring, M.
    Topal, E.
    Kizil, M.
    Knights, P.
    JOURNAL OF THE SOUTHERN AFRICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING AND METALLURGY, 2012, 112 (05) : 365 - 378
  • [9] The Short- and Medium-Term Impacts of the Recession on the UK Income Distribution
    Brewer, Mike
    Browne, James
    Hood, Andrew
    Joyce, Robert
    Sibieta, Luke
    FISCAL STUDIES, 2013, 34 (02) : 179 - 201
  • [10] Integrated optimisation of short- and medium-term planning in underground mines
    Campeau, Louis-Pierre
    Gamache, Michel
    Martinelli, Rafael
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MINING RECLAMATION AND ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 36 (04) : 235 - 253