4.7 Article

Transport properties of fast ice within the nearshore

Journal

COASTAL ENGINEERING
Volume 177, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2022.104176

Keywords

Coastal geomorphology; Fast ice; Sediment entrainment; Sediment transport

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR -1916179]

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Fast ice plays an important role in coastal areas, acting as a protective barrier and a source of erosion. This study reveals that the frictional strength of sediment regulates the stability of fast ice and that measuring the friction coefficient of beach sediment is sufficient to estimate the resistance strength of fast ice.
Fast ice affects many coastlines in high- and mid-latitude regions, shaping the coastal morphology by acting as both a protective barrier from winter storms and as an erosive agent through sediment entrainment and transport. It has been hypothesized that when sediment-rich ice is dislodged and transported beyond the depth of closure by storm waves, sediment is permanently removed from the nearshore, starving the littoral system and facilitating future erosion. However, despite this large potential impact on coastal sediment budgets, the rates and mechanisms of sediment-rich ice transport are poorly constrained. This study investigates the sediment entrainment process by fast ice, the mechanisms needed for ice mobilization, and the force needed to breakup and transport sediment-rich ice. We find that the Coulomb frictional strength of the sediment regulates the fast ice system and that the viscous rheology of the ice has no direct mechanical effect. Importantly, these results show that only the frictional coefficient of the beach sediment needs to be measured to estimate the resistive strength of the fast ice, significantly simplifying the requirements for evaluating the potential for fast ice mobilization and associated sediment transport.

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