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Impacts of Coastal Infrastructure on Shoreline Response to Major Hurricanes in Southwest Louisiana

Authors :
Jack A. Cadigan
Jasmine H. Bekkaye
Navid H. Jafari
Ling Zhu
Ashley R. Booth
Qin Chen
Britt Raubenheimer
Brian D. Harris
Chris O’Connor
Robert Lane
G. Paul Kemp
Jason N. Day
John W. Day
Hanssel Omar Ulloa
Source :
Frontiers in Built Environment. 8
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2022.

Abstract

The Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge, located along the Chenier Plain in Southwest Louisiana, was the location of the sequential landfall of two major hurricanes in the 2020 hurricane season. To protect the rapidly retreating coastline along the Refuge, a system of breakwaters was constructed, which was partially completed by the 2020 hurricane season. Multi-institutional, multi-disciplinary rapid response deployments of wave gauges, piezometers, geotechnical measurements, vegetation sampling, and drone surveys were conducted before and after Hurricanes Laura and Delta along two transects in the Refuge; one protected by a breakwater system and one which was the natural, unprotected shoreline. Geomorphological changes were similar on both transects after Hurricane Laura, while after Delta there was higher inland sediment deposition on the natural shoreline. Floodwaters drained from the transect with breakwater protection more slowly than the natural shoreline, though topography profiles are similar, indicating a potential dampening or complex hydrodynamic interactions between the sediment—wetland—breakwater system. In addition, observations of a fluidized mud deposit in Rollover Bayou in the Refuge are presented and discussed in context of the maintenance of wetland elevation and stability in the sediment starved Chenier Plain.

Details

ISSN :
22973362
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Built Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6d946478d75f8ff1354af13f3536bf9f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbuil.2022.885215