Coastal Restoration Trust of New Zealand

Coastal Dune Ecosystem Reference Database

Extracting a record of Holocene storm erosion and deposition preserved in the morphostratigraphy of a prograded coastal barrier Technical Report

Author
Dougherty, A.J.
Year
2013
Journal / Source
Continental Shelf Research
Volume
86
Number
1
Pages
116-131
Summary
Prograded barriers preserve palaeoenvironmental records within their varied morphologies and buried stratigraphy. In order to extract historical records of particular events, such as storms, the morphostratigraphy of these barriers must be detailed and the evolution deciphered. This study examines the progradation of Omaha barrier, New Zealand, using an integrated high-resolution geophysical and sedimentological approach. The barrier evolution appears complex, both spatially and temporally, with two different linear morphologies forming simultaneously alongshore, which both transition into a third type of ridge morphology across-shore. To determine what influenced the formation of these different morphologies, within the barrier and through time, various geological controls are investigated. The results are threefold: (1) a fall of sea level from a +2 m highstand drove barrier progradation, (2) differences in sediment supply driven by an exposure related longshore energy gradient dictated ridge morphology, and (3) storms punctuating barrier progradation formed the swales that define all morphologic ridges. High-energy events are recorded throughout the formation of Omaha barrier. Storm signatures are the most prominent features identified along the active beach and throughout the barrier morphostratigraphy. Observations of a high-energy event in 2007 document a unique depositional ridge emplaced landward of the characteristic erosional dune scarp and flattened beachface composed of course-grained/heavy mineral lag. A total of 25 paleo-beachfaces with the same post-storm geometry are identified within ground penetrating radar records of the barrier stratigraphy, including one associated with a known event in 1978 that has since been buried. Using limited ages available and the variable preservation of storm events in the morphostratigraphy, a speculative record of storm frequency and intensity is hypothesized. Future work aims to test this hypothesis by acquiring a comprehensive chronology.