Extreme wave activity during 2013/2014 winter and morphological impacts along the Atlantic coast of Europe

Mise à jour : 15 mars 2016
0
changement climatique
érosion côtière
littoral
sédiment

Studies of coastal vulnerability due to climate change tend to focus on the consequences of sea level rise, rather than the complex coastal responses resulting from changes to the extreme wave climate. Here we investigate the 2013/2014 winter wave conditions that severely impacted the Atlantic coast of Europe and demonstrate that this winter was the most energetic along most of the Atlantic coast of Europe since at least 1948. Along exposed open-coast sites, extensive beach and dune erosion occurred due to offshore sediment transport. More sheltered sites experienced less erosion and one of the sites even experienced accretion due to beach rotation induced by alongshore sediment transport. Storm wave conditions such as were encountered during the 2013/2014 winter have the potential to dramatically change the equilibrium state (beach gradient, coastal alignment, and nearshore bar position) of beaches along the Atlantic coast of Europe.

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Extreme wave activity during 2013/2014 winter and morphological impacts along the Atlantic coast of Europe
Type de document
Publication scientifique
Auteurs personnes
Floc’h,France
Jackson,Derek
Suanez,Serge
Dodet, Guillaume
Scott,Tim
Castelle, Bruno
Masselink,Gerd
Auteurs organismes
Domaines Océaniques Technopôle Brest-Iroise
Centre for Coastal and Marine Research
UMR 6554 Littoral environnement télédétection géomatique
EPOC - Environnements et Paléoenvironnements OCéaniques
School of Marine Science and Engineering
Éditeur
American Geophysical Union
Date de parution
15 mars 2016
Langue
Anglais
Masselink_et_al-2016-Geophysical_Research_Letters.pdf
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