DocumentCode :
1296869
Title :
Detailed Bathymetric Surveys Offshore Santa Rosa Island, FL: Before and After Hurricane Ivan (September 16, 2004)
Author :
Kraft, Barbara J. ; De Moustier, Christian
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng. Dept., Univ. of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA
Volume :
35
Issue :
3
fYear :
2010
fDate :
7/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
453
Lastpage :
470
Abstract :
Two weeks before Hurricane Ivan reworked the shores and nearshore seafloor of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico, swath bathymetry surveys were conducted with high-frequency (300 and 455 kHz) multibeam echosounders in three areas offshore Santa Rosa Island, FL, an 80-km barrier island extending west from Destin to Pensacola Bay, FL. These surveys were repeated in late October 2004, six weeks after the passage of the hurricane, allowing for quantitative pre- and posthurricane seabed comparisons. Bathymetric difference maps (0.2-0.3-m grid cells) show that sediment accretion exceeded 1 m in areas near the 6-7-m isobaths, where a submerged longshore bar was formed below the breaker zone of large storm waves. Accretion of sediment continued seaward tapering off near the 11-12-m isobaths, with evidence of slight seabed erosion (0.1-0.2 m) seaward of this boundary. Between the 6- and 12-m contour lines, the increase in sediment volume is about 279 000 m 3/km 2. Grab samples obtained in the area by Vaughan [IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 495-515, 2009] support the hypothesis that the added material is fine sand eroded from the beach and dunes on Santa Rosa Island by the overwash and inundation associated with Ivan´s storm surge and eventually deposited offshore by storm-surge ebb currents. Two-dimensional bottom roughness power density spectra computed from colocated east-west (EW) bathymetry swaths near the 12-m isobath show a post-Ivan threefold increase in root mean square (rms) roughness over the [0.104, 0.495] m-1 spatial wave number band. Bottom roughness spectrograms computed along individual north-south (NS) survey track lines perpendicular to the shoreline and extending 10 km offshore indicate that Ivan-induced waves and currents reworked the seabed to water depths of at least 22 m, with a twofold to fourfold increase in rms roughness over the [0.023, 0.156] m-1 spatial wave number band.
Keywords :
bathymetry; erosion; ocean waves; oceanographic regions; seafloor phenomena; sediments; storms; AD 2004 09 16; AD 2004 10; Gulf of Mexico; Hurricane Ivan; Ivan-induced waves; Santa Rosa Island; USA; bathymetric difference maps; bathymetric surveys; bottom roughness spectrograms; frequency 300 kHz to 455 kHz; nearshore sediment processes; north-south survey; root mean square roughness; seabed erosion; seafloor roughness spectra; sediment volume; spatial wave number band; storm waves; swath bathymetry resolution; Hurricanes; Oceanographic techniques; Sea floor roughness; Sediments; Surges; Hurricane Ivan; nearshore sediment processes; seafloor roughness spectra; storm-surge ebb currents; swath bathymetry resolution;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0364-9059
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2010.2052970
Filename :
5549982
Link To Document :
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