4.6 Article

Linking backbarrier lacustrine stratigraphy with spatial dynamics of shoreline retreat in a rapidly subsiding region of the Mississippi River Delta

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 397, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2021.108008

Keywords

Mississippi delta; Shoreline retreat; Environmental change

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1212112,1735723, 1759715]
  2. Society of Women Ge-ographers Evelyn L. Pruitt National Fellowship for Dissertation Research
  3. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci
  4. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1759715] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The northern Gulf of Mexico shoreline is rapidly retreating, causing coastal features of the abandoned Mississippi River delta complexes to erode and subside. Bay Champagne has retreated over two kilometers in the past 130 years, transitioning from a stable freshwater lake to a disturbed backbarrier lagoon. Through geologic analyses, a timeline of this transition was established, demonstrating that the changes have not occurred at a constant rate.
The northern Gulf of Mexico shoreline is rapidly retreating, and coastal features of the abandoned Mississippi River delta complexes are eroding and subsiding. Bay Champagne is located in the Caminada-Moreau headland, a region located west of the currently active delta that has one of the highest rates of retreat and land loss globally. As a result, the shoreline at Bay Champagne has retreated more than two kilometers in the past 130 years, causing a gradual transition from a stable, circular freshwater lake to a frequently disturbed, semi-circular backbarrier lagoon. Analyses of clastic layers in a series of sediment cores collected at this site over the past decade indicate the lake was less perturbed in the past and has become increasingly more sensitive to marine incursion events caused by tropical cyclones as the shoreline retreated. Geochemical and pollen analyses of the cores also reveal profound changes in environmental and chemical conditions at Bay Champagne over the past century. Through relating stratigraphy to spatial changes observed from satellite imagery, this study establishes a timeline of the transition of Bay Champagne from an inland lake to a backbarrier environment, and demonstrated that these changes have not occurred at a constant rate. These results provide a case-study of changing local environmental conditions in response to rapid shoreline retreat, and therefore serve as a model for future coastal changes for Louisiana and other Gulf coastal areas. (c) 2021 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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