Abstract

Abstract. Barrier island transgression is influenced by the alongshore variation in beach and dune morphology, which determines the amount of sediment moved landward through wash-over. While several studies have demonstrated how variations in dune morphology affect island response to storms, the reasons for that variation and the implications for island management remain unclear. This paper builds on previous research by demonstrating that paleo-channels in the irregular framework geology can have a directional influence on alongshore beach and dune morphology. The influence of relict paleo-channels on beach and dune morphology on Padre Island National Seashore, Texas, was quantified by isolating the long-range dependence (LRD) parameter in autoregressive fractionally integrated moving average (ARFIMA) models, originally developed for stock market economic forecasting. ARFIMA models were fit across ∼250 unique spatial scales and a moving window approach was used to examine how LRD varied with computational scale and location along the island. The resulting LRD matrices were plotted by latitude to place the results in the context of previously identified variations in the framework geology. Results indicate that the LRD is not constant alongshore for all surface morphometrics. Many flares in the LRD plots correlate to relict infilled paleo-channels, indicating that the framework geology has a significant influence on the morphology of Padre Island National Seashore (PAIS). Barrier island surface morphology LRD is strongest at large paleo-channels and decreases to the north. The spatial patterns in LRD surface morphometrics and framework geology variations demonstrate that the influence of paleo-channels can be asymmetric (i.e., affecting beach–dune morphology preferentially in one direction alongshore) where the alongshore sediment transport gradient was unidirectional during island development. The asymmetric influence of framework geology on coastal morphology has long-term implications for coastal management activities because it dictates the long-term behavior of a barrier island. Coastal management projects should first seek to assess the framework geology and understand how it influences coastal processes in order to more effectively balance long-term natural variability with short-term societal pressure.

Highlights

  • Since modern barrier island morphology is the product of past and present coastal processes acting over preexisting morphologies, effective barrier island management requires a comprehensive knowledge of how an island has evolved to its current state in order to understand how it may change in the future

  • Patterns in the subsurface framework geology long-range dependence (LRD) plot demonstrate that the framework geology is self-similar at broader scales and that this structure varies alongshore at finer alongshore length scales which correspond to the scale of the previously identified paleo-channels

  • Since the framework geology reflects the paleo-topography and the modern barrier island surface is dissipative at very broad scales, based on large LRD values at broad scales in the modern barrier island morphology, it follows that the framework geology is dissipative

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Summary

Introduction

Since modern barrier island morphology is the product of past and present coastal processes acting over preexisting morphologies, effective barrier island management requires a comprehensive knowledge of how an island has evolved to its current state in order to understand how it may change in the future. Sections of a barrier island that experience greater wash-over will experience a net loss of sediment landward and localized erosion, but the dissipative nature of shoreline change (see Lazarus et al, 2011) means that those losses are distributed alongshore In this respect, the variation in beach and dune morphology alongshore forced by the framework geology can influence the rate of historical shoreline retreat and island transgression and needs to be considered in models of barrier island response to sea level rise

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