Title of article :
An equilibrium profile model for retreating marsh shorelines in southeast Louisiana
Author/Authors :
Carol A. Wilson، نويسنده , , Mead A. Allison، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Louisiana’s coastal marshes are experiencing the highest wetland loss rates in the U.S., in part due to
subsidence-driven relative sea-level rise. These marshes are also vulnerable to the erosive power of wave
attack: 1) on the marsh edge adjacent to open-water bodies, and 2) after the marsh platform is
submerged. Marsh shorelines in Barataria Bay, Breton Sound, and the active Balize delta of southeastern
Louisiana were examined in areas where the subaerial marsh platform had disappeared since 1932.
Vibracore transects of marsh and adjacent bay surface sediments (to w2 m depth) were analyzed using
geotechnical, stratigraphic, and radiochemical (137-Cs and 210-Pb) methods, and the subaerial-tosubaqueous
transition of the marsh was mapped for elevation using standard stadia rod transit and
fathometer measurements. Results indicate that marsh edge erosion of the platform takes place
subaqueously until water depths of w1.5 m are reached. This is observed even in interior pond regions,
but the shoreface elevation profiles are a function of fetch: exposed open bay sites display greater
incision (depth and rate) of the marsh platform than protected interior bay or pond sites. Core stratigraphy
reveals that the outer part of the subaqueous platform switches from erosional to depositional as
retreat proceeds, covering the incised marsh deposits unconformably with estuarine shelly muds. 137-Cs
and excess 210-Pb activity indicates that these muds are deposited within a few decades of subaerial
marsh loss. The consistency of the cross-shore profile results suggests that a single profile of equilibrium
can approximate the morphology of eroding marsh edges in southeast Louisiana: platform stratigraphy
and resistance to erosion have a limited effect on profile shape. This equilibrium profile and remote
sensing images of shoreline change are used to estimate the sediment yield to adjacent estuarine areas
by this process. On average, 1.5 m3 of sediment are yielded per m shoreline length annually from both
Barataria Bay and Breton Sound. Due to the highly organic nature of the eroded sediment (w30%), this
supply of organic-rich material could significantly impact estuarine productivity and hypoxia on the
Louisiana continental shelf.
Keywords :
marsh erosionequilibrium profilewave attackmarsh geomorphologysediment yieldsLouisianaBarataria BayBreton SoundBalize Delta
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science