Spatial and temporal patterns of shoreline change of a 280-km high-energy disrupted sandy coast from 1950 to 2014: SW France

A dataset of 15 geo-referenced orthomosaics photos was generated to address long-term shoreline change along approximately 270 km of high-energy sandy coast in SW France between 1950 and 2014. The coast consists of sandy beaches backed by coastal dunes, which are only disrupted by two wide tidal inl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Estuarine, coastal and shelf science coastal and shelf science, 2018-01, Vol.200, p.212-223
Hauptverfasser: Castelle, Bruno, Guillot, Benoit, Marieu, Vincent, Chaumillon, Eric, Hanquiez, Vincent, Bujan, Stéphane, Poppeschi, Coline
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A dataset of 15 geo-referenced orthomosaics photos was generated to address long-term shoreline change along approximately 270 km of high-energy sandy coast in SW France between 1950 and 2014. The coast consists of sandy beaches backed by coastal dunes, which are only disrupted by two wide tidal inlets (Arcachon and Maumusson), a wide estuary mouth (Gironde) and a few small wave-dominated inlets and coastal towns. A time and spatially averaged erosion trend of 1.12 m/year is found over 1950–2014, with a local maximum of approximately 11 m/year and a maximum local accretion of approximately 6 m/year, respectively. Maximum shoreline evolutions are observed along coasts adjacent to the inlets and to the estuary mouth, with erosion and accretion alternating over time on the timescale of decades. The two inlet-sandspit systems of Arcachon and Maumusson show a quasi-synchronous behaviour with the two updrift coasts accreting until the 1970s and subsequently eroding since then, which suggests that shoreline change at these locations is controlled by allocyclic mechanisms. Despite sea level rise and the well-established increase in winter wave height over the last decades, there is no capture of significant increase in mean erosion rate. This is hypothesized to be partly the result of relevant coastal dune management works from the 1960s to the 1980s after a long period of coastal dune disrepair during and after the Second World War. This study suggests that long-term shoreline change of high-energy sandy coasts disrupted by inlets and/or estuaries is complex and needs to consider a wide range of parameters including, non-extensively, waves, tides, inlet dynamics, sea level rise, coastal dune management and coastal defences, which challenges the development of reliable long-term coastal evolution numerical models. [Display omitted] •Shoreline change at a 270-km high-energy coast is addressed over the period 1950–2014.•Shoreline variability is maximized close to the inlets and estuary mouth.•The two large-scale inlet-sandspit systems show a quasi-synchronous behaviour.•There is no increase in erosion rate despite sea level rise and increased storminess.•Coastal dune management is critical to reduce erosion on high-energy sandy coasts.
ISSN:0272-7714
1096-0015
DOI:10.1016/j.ecss.2017.11.005