Abstract

Advanced, multidimensional models are typically applied when researching processes occurring in the nearshore. Relatively simple, empirical equations are commonly used in coastal engineering practice in order to estimate extreme wave run-up on beaches and coastal structures. However, they were mostly calibrated to the characteristics of oceanic coasts, which have different wave regime than a semi-enclosed basin like the Baltic Sea. In this paper we apply the formulas to the Polish Baltic Sea coast. The equations were adjusted to match local conditions in two test sites in Międzyzdroje and Dziwnówek, where beaches are under continuous video surveillance. Data from WAM wave model and coastal gauge stations were used, as well as precise measurements of the beaches' cross-sections. More than 600 run-up events spanning from June to December 2013 were analysed, including surges causing dune erosion. Extreme wave run-up R2% was calculated and presented as a percentage value indicating what part of the beach was inundated. The method had a root-mean-square error of 6.1 and 6.5 percentage points depending on the test site. We consider it is a fast and computationally undemanding alternative to morphodynamic models. It will constitute a part of the SatBałtyk Operating System-Shores, delivering forecasts of wave run-up on the beaches for the entire Polish coastline.

Highlights

  • Coastal zone represents a dynamic environment where land, sea and atmosphere meet

  • Small-scale elements of a depositional coast can experience rapid change in their morphology, mainly due to short-term sea level variations caused by storm surges [3,4,5,6]

  • The earliest formulation of this is by Hunt [30], who gives the following equation: R H0

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal zone represents a dynamic environment where land, sea and atmosphere meet. Small-scale elements of a depositional coast can experience rapid change in their morphology, mainly due to short-term sea level variations caused by storm surges [3,4,5,6]. In this perspective it is crucial for coastal managers to determine the impact of the sea on the coast especially in the aspect of potential hazard and risk to human activities as well as to the shore itself. This includes the possibility of making predictions of those impacts

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