Hard-Rock Coastal Modelling: Past Practice and Future Prospects in a Changing World
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- a)
- The nature and relative efficacy of the physical, chemical, and biological processes operating on rock coasts and how they are influenced by the climate, wave regime, tidal range, rock structure and mineralogy, and other factors;
- b)
- Rates of erosion and how they vary spatially within the sub-, inter-, and supratidal zones, and temporally with changes in intertidal morphology;
- c)
- Whether intertidal shore platforms and other elements of rock coasts are essentially contemporary (Holocene), having formed since the sea rose to approximately its present level, or ancient, inherited features formed and modified when sea level permitted coastal processes to expose and reshape the features; and
- d)
- The morphodynamic response of beaches with resistant rock foundations (platform-beaches) to rising sea level, increased storminess, and other manifestations of climate change.
2. Rock Coast Models
2.1. Coastal Profiles
2.2. Coastal Plan-Shape
3. Changes in Relative Sea Level
- a)
- Some older subaerial terraces (above present sea level), especially on steeply sloping, slowly rising landmasses, were eroded or completely eliminated by the development of younger terraces at lower elevations.
- b)
- Submarine terraces (below present sea level) were modified by erosion during subsequent periods of rising and falling sea level and are best preserved on rapidly subsiding landmasses where they were quickly carried below, and therefore protected from, later glacial stage sea levels.
- c)
- Prominent terraces formed during glacial, low sea level periods can alternate with those formed during interglacial, high sea level periods in the submarine and subaerial zones of rapidly rising or subsiding landmasses.
- d)
- The larger sea level oscillations of the mid- to late Quaternary were more conducive to erosion than the smaller oscillations in the Pliocene and early Quaternary.
4. Equilibrium
5. Inheritance
6. Modelling Constraints and Limitations
- a)
- Tidal variations, including the tidal range and the tidal type, control: the way that wave energy is dissipated in the vertical plane; weathering type and efficacy related to the amount of time that rocks are exposed to the air and immersed in salt water; and the distribution and activities of biological agents [4]. Tidal influences can be represented by the tidal duration distribution or by inputting actual tidal data, although it would be impractical to use the latter option over very long, evolutionary-scale periods.
- b)
- Tidal data alone does not adequately represent the distribution of wave energy in the intertidal zone. This is because the largest and most effective waves crossing sloping shore platforms are tidally modulated [79,80,86]. The highest waves also operate under storm surge conditions when the tidal level can be elevated, by up to several metres, by wind shear and other weather-induced elements (Figure 3).
- c)
- Soft rock models have often been based on semi-empirical equations derived from the consolidated till coasts of the lower Great Lakes of North America. These equations are site specific and emphasize the erosional effect of wave-generated bottom currents on profile development. They are inappropriate for hard rock coasts because: bottom currents are generally considered to be too weak to be effective in these environments; and erosion is dominated by processes operating around the still water level.
- d)
- Models used to predict the effect of rising sea level and possibly increased storminess in sediment-rich areas must consider changes on beach morphology and volume, and consequently such factors as the degree of cliff exposure and whether beach material is protecting or abrading rock surfaces. The underlying assumptions of the Bruun Rule are rarely satisfied on hard rock coasts and should not be used to represent the effect of sea level change on beaches with rigid foundations.
- e)
- Most models have been concerned exclusively with wave-generated backwearing, but they also need to incorporate the effect of weathering and other factors that operate primarily in the vertical plane.
- f)
- It is possible that cryogenic weathering, involving physico-chemical processes that operated during glacial periods, when sea level was much lower than today, played important roles in the development of rock coasts in mid- to high latitudes [48,87,88], pp. 305–308. Therefore, rates of coastal development may have varied considerably in the past, due to the effect of the changing climate on erosional processes and efficacies.
- g)
- The increasing computational and numerical sophistication of rock coast models must not mask a commensurate growth in model assumptions or obfuscate the continuing lack of reliable information on erosion rates and processes. The lack of reliable field data is a crucial problem which has hindered model development and limited their predictive capabilities, particularly in wave-dominated environments. For example, while we have some data on rates of downwearing by weathering and occasionally by abrasion [89,90,91], we have almost no comparable data on the temporally episodic and spatially sporadic dislodgment of larger rock fragments by wave quarrying [77,92,93,94].
- h)
- Model calibration is hampered by the lack of comparable, long-term field data and by limited numerical modelling of actual field morphology. Consequently, only limited verification is possible, usually by reference to contemporary erosion rates and morphology in the field. The ability of models to simulate contemporary conditions could be an expression of equifinality, however, concealing the occurrence of marked disparities in the past and their likely existence in the future.
7. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Trenhaile, A.S. Hard-Rock Coastal Modelling: Past Practice and Future Prospects in a Changing World. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2019, 7, 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7020034
Trenhaile AS. Hard-Rock Coastal Modelling: Past Practice and Future Prospects in a Changing World. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2019; 7(2):34. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7020034
Chicago/Turabian StyleTrenhaile, Alan S. 2019. "Hard-Rock Coastal Modelling: Past Practice and Future Prospects in a Changing World" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 7, no. 2: 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7020034
APA StyleTrenhaile, A. S. (2019). Hard-Rock Coastal Modelling: Past Practice and Future Prospects in a Changing World. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 7(2), 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7020034