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Intertidal flat development in response to controlled embankment retreat: Freiston Shore, The Wash, UK

Intertidal flat development in response to controlled embankment retreat: Freiston Shore, The Wash, UK
Intertidal flat development in response to controlled embankment retreat: Freiston Shore, The Wash, UK
A soft engineering method of removing existed flood defences to restore salt marsh has been widely used to protect the coastal region in European countries. This study investigates the response of the intertidal zone at Freiston Shore to a controlled embankment retreat (CER) completed in August 2002, and interprets changes in sediment dynamics and bed level across the intertidal zone based on an analysis of temporal and spatial variations in the suspended sediment flux over semi-diurnal tidal cycles. In addition, a numerical simulation (Delft3D) was performed to analyze the long-term development of the intertidal zone. The current velocity turned further seaward during the ebb 25 months after the de-embankment, with an apparent simultaneous decline of suspended sediment concentration (SSC). Between April 2003 and October 2004, the middle intertidal flat shifted from an erosional to an accretionary state, whereas the reverse was true on the lower intertidal flat. The spatial pattern of suspended sediment flux suggests that sediments eroded from the mid-intertidal zone after 9 months of CER have been re-deposited in the lower intertidal zone, and the process was reversed 16 months after. Tidally residual suspended sediment flux varied with the changing sediment dynamics. The modeling results indicate a similar trend in bed level change to the field observations at Freiston Shore, which was in an early phase of intertidal flat readjustment to the CER. Tidal creek system played an important role in transient geomorphological shift between the middle and lower intertidal flat. Furthermore, the model simulation revealed the time variation of bed level changes at different elevations over the intertidal flat, indicating that the flat would essentially revert to its original pre-CER morphology within decades, which depended highly upon the sediment supply condition. Finally, a conceptual model is developed, based on field survey and numerical simulations, to summarize the developmental processes operating within the intertidal zone in response to CER.
Intertidal flat, Controlled embankment retreat, Suspended sediment flux, Seabed level, Delft3D model, Freiston Shore
0025-3227
260-273
Ni, Wenfei
5d2895c2-0015-4ebf-ae66-07e4aefbc824
Wang, Ya Ping
39ca2e13-2d50-4fef-9258-f0c1a1f7681b
Symonds, A.M.
4c581e18-970b-4b05-b498-868eb5cca2d8
Collins, M.B.
3b70278b-0004-45e0-b3c9-0debdf0a9351
Ni, Wenfei
5d2895c2-0015-4ebf-ae66-07e4aefbc824
Wang, Ya Ping
39ca2e13-2d50-4fef-9258-f0c1a1f7681b
Symonds, A.M.
4c581e18-970b-4b05-b498-868eb5cca2d8
Collins, M.B.
3b70278b-0004-45e0-b3c9-0debdf0a9351

Ni, Wenfei, Wang, Ya Ping, Symonds, A.M. and Collins, M.B. (2014) Intertidal flat development in response to controlled embankment retreat: Freiston Shore, The Wash, UK. Marine Geology, 355, 260-273. (doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2014.06.001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A soft engineering method of removing existed flood defences to restore salt marsh has been widely used to protect the coastal region in European countries. This study investigates the response of the intertidal zone at Freiston Shore to a controlled embankment retreat (CER) completed in August 2002, and interprets changes in sediment dynamics and bed level across the intertidal zone based on an analysis of temporal and spatial variations in the suspended sediment flux over semi-diurnal tidal cycles. In addition, a numerical simulation (Delft3D) was performed to analyze the long-term development of the intertidal zone. The current velocity turned further seaward during the ebb 25 months after the de-embankment, with an apparent simultaneous decline of suspended sediment concentration (SSC). Between April 2003 and October 2004, the middle intertidal flat shifted from an erosional to an accretionary state, whereas the reverse was true on the lower intertidal flat. The spatial pattern of suspended sediment flux suggests that sediments eroded from the mid-intertidal zone after 9 months of CER have been re-deposited in the lower intertidal zone, and the process was reversed 16 months after. Tidally residual suspended sediment flux varied with the changing sediment dynamics. The modeling results indicate a similar trend in bed level change to the field observations at Freiston Shore, which was in an early phase of intertidal flat readjustment to the CER. Tidal creek system played an important role in transient geomorphological shift between the middle and lower intertidal flat. Furthermore, the model simulation revealed the time variation of bed level changes at different elevations over the intertidal flat, indicating that the flat would essentially revert to its original pre-CER morphology within decades, which depended highly upon the sediment supply condition. Finally, a conceptual model is developed, based on field survey and numerical simulations, to summarize the developmental processes operating within the intertidal zone in response to CER.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 June 2014
Published date: September 2014
Keywords: Intertidal flat, Controlled embankment retreat, Suspended sediment flux, Seabed level, Delft3D model, Freiston Shore
Organisations: Geology & Geophysics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 365548
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365548
ISSN: 0025-3227
PURE UUID: d80d6230-fd8b-421c-80a7-59d3f91db031

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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2014 16:12
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:57

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Contributors

Author: Wenfei Ni
Author: Ya Ping Wang
Author: A.M. Symonds
Author: M.B. Collins

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