Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Bergsma E. W. J., Conley D. C., Davidson M. A., O'Hare T. J., Almar Rafaël. (2019). Storm event to seasonal evolution of nearshore bathymetry derived from shore-based video imagery. Remote Sensing, 11 (5), p. art. 519 [23 p.]. ISSN 2072-4292.

Titre du document
Storm event to seasonal evolution of nearshore bathymetry derived from shore-based video imagery
Année de publication
2019
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000462544500047
Auteurs
Bergsma E. W. J., Conley D. C., Davidson M. A., O'Hare T. J., Almar Rafaël
Source
Remote Sensing, 2019, 11 (5), p. art. 519 [23 p.] ISSN 2072-4292
Coastal evolution occurs on a wide range of time-scales, from storms, seasonal and inter-annual time-scales to longer-term adaptation to changing environmental conditions. Measuring campaigns typically either measure morphological evolution on a short-time scale (days) with high frequency (hourly) or long-time scales (years) but intermittently (monthly). This leaves an important observational gap that limits morphological variability assessments. Traditional echo sounding measurements on this long time-scale and high-frequency sampling require a significant financial injection. Shore-based video systems with high spatiotemporal resolution can bridge this gap. For the first time, hourly Kalman filtered video-derived bathymetries covering 1.5 years of morphological evolution with an hourly resolution obtained at Porhtowan, UK are presented. Here, the long-term hourly dataset is used and aims to show its added value for, and provide an in-depth, morphological analyses with unprecedented temporal resolution. The time-frame includes calm and extreme (storm) wave conditions in a macro-tidal environment. The video-derived bathymetries allow hourly beach state classification while before this was not possible due to the dependence on foam patterns of wave breaking (e.g., saturation during storms). The study period covers extreme storm erosion during the most energetic winter season in 60 years (2013-2014). Recovery of the beach takes place on several time-scales: (1) an immediate initial recovery after the storm season (first 2 months), (2) limited recovery during low energetic summer conditions and (3) accelerated recovery as the wave conditions picked up in the subsequent fallunder wave conditions that are typically erosive. The video-derived bathymetries are shown to be effective in determining bar-positions, outer-bar three-dimensionality and volume analyses with an unprecedented hourly temporal resolution.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Limnologie physique / Océanographie physique [032] ; Géologie et formations superficielles [064] ; Télédétection [126]
Description Géographique
ANGLETERRE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010075532]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010075532
Contact