J. Pollard, S. Brooks, T. Spencer, Elizabeth K. Christie, I. Moeller
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引用次数: 3
摘要
“堰洲岛”指的是各种海岸地貌的集合,这些地貌通常支持大量人口、关键基础设施和生态系统。在全球范围内,许多沿海屏障正在经历气候变化的环境强迫,加上不断增加的人为压力。本文进行了高分辨率的海岸线变化分析,以揭示Blakeney Point是如何在百年,十年和事件时间尺度上演变的,Blakeney Point是位于英国东海岸的混合沙砾屏障。我们试图建立屏障演变的影响,在对比管理制度下,目前的侵蚀和洪水灾害。询问一系列替代的海岸线代理,揭示了一系列相互依赖的行为。在130年的研究期间,Blakeney Point以平均0.60 m a-1的速度向陆地滚动。假设未来几十年继续向陆地撤退,未来产生洪水的风暴事件将遇到比今天更多的向陆地的海岸线位置。在这一趋势的叠加下,我们观察到沿岸迁移侵蚀热点的存在,这些热点在沙嘴上的任何给定位置都会产生不可预测的形态。最后,我们发现障壁后退的实例是由个别风暴事件驱动的,这使得障壁后退在时间和空间上具有高度的可变性和不连续性。溢流现象的存在说明了这一点,特别是在最近管理制度转向不干预做法的隔离墙沿线。
WILL NATURE WORK WITH US? EROSION AND FLOODING IMPACTS ON A UK BARRIER
‘Barrier island’ refers to a diverse collection of coastal landforms that often support substantial human populations, critical infrastructures, and ecosystems. Globally, many coastal barriers are experiencing climatically altered environmental forcing coupled with increasing anthropogenic pressures. This paper undertakes high resolution shoreline change analysis to reveal how Blakeney Point, a mixed sandy-gravel barrier located on the UK’s East Coast, has evolved over centennial, decadal and event timescales. We seek to establish the implications of barrier evolution, under contrasting management regimes, for present erosion and flooding hazards. Interrogating a series of alternative shoreline proxies reveals a series of interdependent behaviors. Over the 130-year period of study, Blakeney Point is shown to be rolling landward at a mean rate of 0.60 m a-1. Assuming continued landward retreat over the coming decades, future flood-generating storm events will encounter more landward shoreline positions than today. Superimposed on this trend, we observe the presence of alongshore migrating erosional hotspots which give rise to unpredictable morphologies at any given location on the spit. Finally, we find that instances of barrier setback are driven by individual storm events, which makes barrier retreat both highly variable and discontinuous in time and space. This is illustrated by the presence of overwash, particularly along stretches of the barrier that have experienced a recent shift in management regime towards a non-interventionist approach.