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Role of morphologic feedback in surf zone sandbar response

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Title Role of morphologic feedback in surf zone sandbar response
Names Plant, Nathaniel G. (creator)
Freilich, Michael H. (creator)
Holman, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 2001-01-15 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract Several aspects of feedback mechanisms associated with surf zone sandbar
response have been characterized using bathymetric surveys, sampled approximately
monthly over a 16-year period at the Army Corps of Engineers' Field Research Facility
(North Carolina). The measured bathymetry was alongshore averaged and modeled by the
superposition of two Gaussian-shaped sandbars on an underlying planar slope. A third,
half-Gaussian-shaped bar represented steepening at the shoreline. The rms error between
the measured bathymetry and the profile model was 0.10 m (estimated over 322 different
surveys). The model explained 99% of the profile variance that remained after first
removing the linear, cross-shore trend from each observed profile. Bar response, which
was extracted from the modeled profiles, was compared to a local hydrodynamic forcing
variable Γ (Γ was defined as the ratio of the wave height to water depth, evaluated at bar
crest locations). At low values of Γ (i.e., nonbreaking conditions), bars migrated onshore,
and their amplitude tended to decay. At high values of Γ (i.e., breaking conditions), bars
migrated offshore, with relatively little change in amplitude. The transition between
onshore and offshore migration occurred at a value of Γ that was consistent with the onset
of wave breaking. Bar migration was associated with a stabilizing feedback mechanism,
which drove bar crests toward an equilibrium position at the wave breakpoint. However,
we observed that the rate of bar response showed no reduction for any nonzero choice of
Γ, indicating that bars never reached equilibrium. Systematic bar amplitude decay was
observed under nonbreaking conditions. Bar amplitude decay could drive Γ farther away
from breaking conditions, allowing further bar amplitude decay. This is a destabilizing
feedback mechanism, potentially leading to bar destruction.
Genre Article
Identifier Holman, R. A., Freilich, M. H., Plant, N. G., Role of morphologic feedback in surf zone sandbar response (2001), J. Geophys. Res., 106, C1, 2001.

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