Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Beach response due to sand nourishment on the east coast of Malaysia

View through CrossRef
The Cempedak Bay beach stability assessment was performed by comparing the spatial and temporal pattern of beach variability before and after sand nourishment. The analysis of temporal sand volume patterns shows that the beach has lost about 6% or 10 000 m3 volume of sand which is equivalent to 4 m3/m per year from the nourishment zone over the 2·5-year monitoring period. The present shoreline recession rate is established to be 1·7 m/year (valid for data set of March 2005 to July 2007). The analysis of seasonal changes is assessed through temporal beach volume patterns, which indicate that shoreline variability can be characterised by an alongshore rhythmic pattern of alternating seasonal behaviour. A simple seasonal transport pattern is proposed to account for alternating erosion and accretion. The temporal distribution pattern of beach level changes reveals the existence of a nodal point around 40 to 50 m offshore, which is influenced by the monsoonal system. The spatial distribution of the beach width indicates that the northern beach area is wider whereas the southern beach area experiences lower beach width, which is coincident with the temporal pattern of sand volume and beach profile changes. A slight beach rotation does exist attributed to a seasonal or periodic shift in wave climate, in particular wave direction. The planform stability of the beach is tricky to determine due to model uncertainties, especially the selection of the diffraction point. This baseline study is important towards the development of a process-based model in order to investigate the morphological nearshore behaviour of headland bay beaches.
Title: Beach response due to sand nourishment on the east coast of Malaysia
Description:
The Cempedak Bay beach stability assessment was performed by comparing the spatial and temporal pattern of beach variability before and after sand nourishment.
The analysis of temporal sand volume patterns shows that the beach has lost about 6% or 10 000 m3 volume of sand which is equivalent to 4 m3/m per year from the nourishment zone over the 2·5-year monitoring period.
The present shoreline recession rate is established to be 1·7 m/year (valid for data set of March 2005 to July 2007).
The analysis of seasonal changes is assessed through temporal beach volume patterns, which indicate that shoreline variability can be characterised by an alongshore rhythmic pattern of alternating seasonal behaviour.
A simple seasonal transport pattern is proposed to account for alternating erosion and accretion.
The temporal distribution pattern of beach level changes reveals the existence of a nodal point around 40 to 50 m offshore, which is influenced by the monsoonal system.
The spatial distribution of the beach width indicates that the northern beach area is wider whereas the southern beach area experiences lower beach width, which is coincident with the temporal pattern of sand volume and beach profile changes.
A slight beach rotation does exist attributed to a seasonal or periodic shift in wave climate, in particular wave direction.
The planform stability of the beach is tricky to determine due to model uncertainties, especially the selection of the diffraction point.
This baseline study is important towards the development of a process-based model in order to investigate the morphological nearshore behaviour of headland bay beaches.

Related Results

The fate of beach nourishment sand placed on the Florida East Coast
The fate of beach nourishment sand placed on the Florida East Coast
Over 100 million yd3 of sand have been placed on Florida east coast beaches since the start of widespread beach nourishment in 1970. What has been the fate of this sand? Has it lar...
Sand Production Management
Sand Production Management
Abstract Sand production may be inevitable in many fields that have a relatively lower formation strength. Sand erosion and settling predictions and sand monitori...
Monitoring beach nourishment evolution using satellite data: the case of Vale do Lobo (Portugal) 
Monitoring beach nourishment evolution using satellite data: the case of Vale do Lobo (Portugal) 
Increasing pressure on the coastal zone, driven by urbanization and related adoption of hard engineering protection structures, has frequently contributed to a gradual amplificatio...
Sand Beach Nourishment: Experience from the Mediterranean Coast of Israel
Sand Beach Nourishment: Experience from the Mediterranean Coast of Israel
Beach nourishment along the Mediterranean coast of Israel represents a new approach to mitigate coastal erosion by adding suitable sand to threatened beaches. This ‘soft’ solution ...
A Sand Failure Test Can Cut Both Completion Costs And The Number Of Developement Wells
A Sand Failure Test Can Cut Both Completion Costs And The Number Of Developement Wells
Abstract The objective of this Sand Failure Test was to determine whether initial sand control is necessary on a poorly consolidated gas field, or whether it can ...

Back to Top