Onshore sandbar migration at Tairua Beach (New Zealand): Numerical simulations and field measurements |
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Authors: | B. van Maanen P.J. de Ruiter Giovanni Coco K.R. Bryan B.G. Ruessink |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Physical Geography, Faculty of Geosciences, Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, Utrecht University, PO Box 80-115, 3508 TC Utrecht, The Netherlands;bNational Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, PO Box 11-115, Hamilton 3216, New Zealand;cDepartment of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | ![]() We observed the onshore migration (3.5 m/day) of a nearshore sandbar at Tairua Beach, New Zealand during 4 days of low-energy wave conditions. The morphological observations, together with concurrent measurements of waves and suspended sediment concentrations, were used to test a coupled, wave-averaged, cross-shore model. Because of the coarse bed material and the relatively low-energy conditions, the contribution of the suspended transport to the total transport was predicted and observed to be negligible. The model predicted the bar to move onshore because of the feedback between near-bed wave skewness, bedload, and the sandbar under weakly to non-breaking conditions at high tide. The predicted bathymetric evolution contrasts, however, with the observations that the bar migrated onshore predominantly at low tide. Also, the model flattened the bar, while in the observations the sandbar retained its steep landward-facing flank. A comparison between available observations and numerical simulations suggests that onshore propagating surf zone bores in very shallow water (< 0.25 m) may have been responsible for most of the observed bar behaviour. These processes are missing from the applied model and, given that the observed conditions can be considered typical of very shallow sandbars, highlight a priority for further field study and model development. The possibility that the excess water transported by the bores across the bar was channelled alongshore to near-by rip-channels further implies that traditional cross-shore measures to judge the applicability of a cross-shore morphodynamic model may be misleading. |
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Keywords: | nearshore sandbars sediment transport onshore migration surf zone bores wave skewness |
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