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Impact of mean sea-level rise on the long-term evolution of a mega-nourishment

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Física
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. DF-GeoTech - Dinàmica de Fluids i Aplicacions Geofísiques i Tecnològiques
Ribas Prats, Francesca
Portos Amill, Laura
Falqués Serra, Albert
Arriaga García, Jaime Alonso
Marcos Moreno, Marta
Ruessink, Gerben
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Física
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. DF-GeoTech - Dinàmica de Fluids i Aplicacions Geofísiques i Tecnològiques
Ribas Prats, Francesca
Portos Amill, Laura
Falqués Serra, Albert
Arriaga García, Jaime Alonso
Marcos Moreno, Marta
Ruessink, Gerben
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Mean sea-level rise (MSLR) will induce shoreline recession, increasing the stress on coastal systems of high socio-economic and environmental values. Localized mega-nourishments are meant to alleviate erosion problems by diffusing alongshore over decades and thus feeding adjacent beaches. The 21-st century morphological evolution of the Delfland coast, where the Sand Engine mega-nourishment was built in 2011, was simulated with the Q2Dmorfo model to assess the Sand Engine capacity to protect the area against the effects of MSLR. The calibrated and validated model was forced with historical wave and sea-level data and MSLR projections until 2100 corresponding to different Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP2.6, RCP4.5 and RCP8.5). Results show that the Sand Engine diffusive trend will continue in forthcoming decades, with the feeding effect to adjacent beaches being less noticeable from 2050 onward. Superimposed to this alongshore diffusion, MSLR causes the shoreline to recede because of both passive-flooding and a net offshore sediment transport produced by wave reshaping and gravity. The existing feeding asymmetry enforces more sediment transport to the NE than to the SW, causing the former to remain stable whilst the SW shoreline retreats significantly, especially from 2050 onward. Sediment from the Sand Engine does not reach the beaches located more than 6 km to the SW, with a strong shoreline and profile recession in that area, as well as dune erosion. The uncertainties in the results are dominated by those related to the free model parameters up to 2050 whilst uncertainties in MSLR projections prevail from 2050 to 2100.<br />This work has been funded by the Spanish government through the research projects RTI2018-093941-B-C31 and RTI2018-093941-B-C33 (MINECO/FEDER)<br />Peer Reviewed<br />Postprint (published version)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1390666138
Document Type :
Electronic Resource