Abstract
The impact of future sea-level rise on coastal erosion as a result of a
changing climate has been studied in detail over the past decade. The
potential impact of a changing wave climate on erosion rates, however, is
not typically considered. We explore the effect of changing wave climates on
a pinned, soft-cliff, sandy coastline, using as an example the Holderness
coast of East Yorkshire, UK.
The initial phase of the study concentrates on calibrating a numerical model
to recently measured erosion rates for the Holderness coast using an ensemble
of geomorphological and shoreface parameters under an observed offshore wave
climate. In the main phase of the study, wave climate data are perturbed
gradually to assess their impact on coastal morphology. Forward-modelled
simulations constrain the nature of the morphological response of the coast
to changes in wave climate over the next century. Results indicate that
changes to erosion rates over the next century will be spatially and
temporally heterogeneous, with a variability of up to ±25% in the
erosion rate relative to projections under constant wave climate. The
heterogeneity results from the current coastal morphology and the sediment
transport dynamics consequent on differing wave climate regimes.
Citation
ID:
226803
Ref Key:
barkwith2014earthcoastal