4.5 Article

Wind direction and complex sediment transport response across a beach-dune system

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 37, Issue 15, Pages 1661-1677

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.3306

Keywords

aeolian sand transport; secondary air flow; flow-form interaction; topographic steering; wind and transport vectors

Funding

  1. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  2. Prince Edward Island National Park
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  4. LSU

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Evidence from a field study on wind flow and sediment transport across a beachdune system under onshore and offshore conditions (including oblique approach angles) indicates that sediment transport response on the back-beach and stoss slope of the foredune can be exceedingly complex. The upper-air flow measured by a sonic anemometer at the top of a 3.5?m tower located on the dune crest is similar to regional wind records obtained from a nearby meteorological station, but quite different from the near-surface flow field measured locally across the beachdune profile by sonic anemometers positioned 20?cm above the sand surface. Flowform interaction at macro and micro scales leads to strong modulation of the near-surface wind vectors, including wind speed reductions (due to surface roughness drag and adverse pressure effects induced by the dune) and wind speed increases (due to flow compression toward the top of the dune) as well as pronounced topographic steering during oblique wind approach angles. A conceptual model is proposed, building on the ideas of Sweet and Kocurek (Sedimentology 37: 1023-1038, 1990), Walker and Nickling (Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 28: 111-1124, 2002), and Lynch et al. (Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 33: 991-1005, 2008, Geomorphology 105: 139-146, 2010), which shows how near-surface wind vectors are altered for four regional wind conditions: (a) onshore, detached; (b) onshore-oblique, attached and deflected; (c) offshore, detached; and (d) offshore-oblique, attached and deflected. High-frequency measurements of sediment transport intensity during these different events demonstrate that predictions of sediment flux using standard equations driven by regional wind statistics would by unreliable and misleading. It is recommended that field studies routinely implement experimental designs that treat the near-surface wind field as comprising true vector quantities (with speed and direction) in order that a more robust linkage between the regional (upper air) wind field and the sediment transport response across the beachdune profile be established. Copyright (C) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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