The effect of repeated sand nourishments on long-term nearshore evolution: a case study for Noordwijk aan Zee, the Netherlands
- Department of Physical Geography, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, the Netherlands (n.p.vermeer@uu.nl)
Sand nourishments are carried out along numerous sandy coasts worldwide to counteract coastal erosion, with the sand added to the inter- and supratidal beach or to the subtidal nearshore profile. Since the early 1990s beach and shoreface nourishments have been carried out along the Dutch coast, with a total nourished volume of 10 to 15 Mm3/year. Although we have a reasonable understanding of how an individual nourishment temporarily affects the evolution of nearshore morphology, it is not clear how repeated nourishments influence the long-term dynamics of the nearshore zone. This understanding is crucial, not only for the safety of beachgoers or marine life, but especially in view of the expected increase in the number of nourishments and total nourishment volume given expected accelerating sea-level rise in the decades to come.
This contribution aims to analyse how repeated nourishments affect the long-term evolution of the shoreline and the two subtidal sandbars at the Dutch beach town Noordwijk aan Zee using Argus video imagery available since 1995. Between 1998 and 2014 four shoreface and three beach nourishments were carried out at the study site. The low-tide time-exposure images of the Argus station were used to determine sandbar and shoreline position along a 6-km stretch of coast.
The results show that prior to the first nourishment the sandbars migrated seaward slowly but persistently. The repeated nourishments permanently decreased this seaward directed migration rate of the sandbars to only a few m/year. The sandbars showed alternating periods of seasonal to multi-year onshore and offshore migration superimposed on this very weak decadal offshore trend. Furthermore, the various sand nourishments gave rise to forked shoreline-sandbar morphology. This large-scale alongshore variability was undone within 1 – 2 years by switches, in which the landward part of a sandbar or the shoreline on one side of the fork realigned with the seaward part of a bar on the other side. These switches appear to be a direct consequence of the repeated nourishments. For example, the 2013-2014 sequence of a beach and a shoreface nourishment resulted in 4 bar switches within the subsequent 2 years, compared to a total of 12 switches in the total dataset of 24.8 years. Further analysis will focus on the effect of repeated nourishments on the temporal and spatial persistence of rip-channel morphology and on the wave conditions that caused the forked morphology to switch.
How to cite: Vermeer, N., Ruessink, G., and Price, T.: The effect of repeated sand nourishments on long-term nearshore evolution: a case study for Noordwijk aan Zee, the Netherlands, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3021, 2021.