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Storm Swash Terraces: A Previously Overlooked Element of the Cliff-Shore Platform System

Authors :
John McKenna
J. Andrew G. Cooper
Derek Jackson
Source :
Journal of Sedimentary Research. 82:260-269
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Society for Sedimentary Geology, 2012.

Abstract

Storm swash terraces are a distinctive and previously unreported component of the cliff-shore platform sedimentary system. They consist of laminated marine sands and gravels with occasional large, rounded clasts and fine muddy laminae. The planar deposits dip gently seaward, are up to 1 m thick at the seaward margin, and thin landwards, forming a wedge. They are laterally continuous over tens of meters in a coast-parallel dimension. They occur in coastal re-entrants at the rear of boulder beaches and shore platforms at elevations between 1 and 9 m above contemporary high-tide level. The terrace sediments represent deposition at the limit of wave run-up during extreme storms; during such events wave energy is largely dissipated by a shore platform and/or boulder beach but sufficient energy remains to carry water and fine sediment to higher levels, where it then accumulates. The deposition and preservation of storm swash terraces depend on a coastal topography that combines partial wave-energy dissipation on a shore platform or boulder beach with available depositional space to landwards. These deposits contain a sedimentary record of past storminess on high-energy coasts that has yet to be exploited.

Details

ISSN :
15271404
Volume :
82
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Sedimentary Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f314e830c3bfa1a4e5a5a6d5f143a3ad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2110/jsr.2012.24