Barrier islands

 

Elongate accumulations of sediment formed in the shallow coastal zone and separated from the mainland by some combination of coastal bays and their associated marshes and tidal flats. Barrier islands are typically several times longer than their width and are interrupted by tidal inlets. There are at least three possible explanations for their origin: (1) longshore spit development and subsequent cutting of inlets; (2) upward shoaling by wave action of subtidal longshore sand bars; and (3) drowning of coastal ridges. All three modes of origin may have occurred. The first two have been observed in recent times, the third is yet to be conclusively demonstrated.

 

Formation

 

Modern barrier islands extend along approximately 15% of the Earth's coasts. They are geologically quite young, having been formed about 7000 years ago or less, as sea level slowed or came to its present position during the Holocene transgression. Some are still in the process of forming and gaining definition. The primary requisites for their formation are a significant amount of available sediment, a place for it to accumulate, and significant wave-energy influence. Tectonic setting is an important control in the development of barrier islands, with most forming along the American-type trailing edge coasts of mature continental margins such as the east coasts of North and South America. The low-relief coastal plain and adjacent shelf are served by well-developed drainage systems with abundant sediment. Barriers are also well developed along marginal sea coasts such as the Gulf of Mexico. Both of these settings provide ideal conditions to produce long and continuous barrier island systems. This contrasts with leading-edge coasts on converging plate boundaries where there is high relief. This type of coasts tends to produce numerous but small barrier spits emanating from headlands, such as along the Pacific coast of the United States.  See also: Continental margin; Plate tectonics

 

Barrier environments

 

It is not possible to discuss barrier islands without considering the adjacent and closely related environments within the coastal system. Beginning offshore and proceeding toward land, the sequence of environments comprises shoreface, including the offshore and nearshore; beach; dunes; washover fans, which comprise the back-island flats; marsh; tidal flat; and coastal bay, which may be a combination of estuarine and lagoonal environments leading to the mainland (Fig. 1). The barrier island proper includes the beach, dunes, and washover fans; however, the adjacent shoreface is well integrated with the barrier in terms of morphology, processes, and sediments.

 

 

Fig. 1  Generalized profile across a barrier island complex showing various environments.

 

 

 

fig 1

 

 

 

Shoreface

 

The shoreface extends from the zone where storm waves influence bottom sediment transport, shoreward to the low-tide line. Typically it is subdivided into the outer shoreface, that area affected only by storm waves, and the inner shoreface or nearshore zone, where normal waves influence the bottom. The latter contains shallow longshore sand bars and troughs, varying in number from one coastal location to another. The depths of water marking the boundaries of the shoreface vary with location, depending upon wave climate.

 

Beach

 

The barrier island itself begins at the low-tide or outer limit of the beach. In many places the lower part of the beach is characterized by an ephemeral bar and trough generally called a ridge and runnel (Fig. 1). This small bar moves onto the upper beach under low-energy wave conditions, either repairing earlier storm erosion or adding to the beach, thereby causing the island to prograde. The upper intertidal or foreshore beach extends up to the berm, where the foreshore and backshore beach environments meet. The upper foreshore slopes toward the water and is the site of the uprush and backwash of waves—the swash zone. The backshore part of the beach is a dry, eolian environment except during storms. It tends to be horizontal or slightly landward-sloping.  See also: Eolian landforms

 

Dunes

 

Coastal dunes occupy a wide range of portions of the barrier island. The most common site of dune development is immediately landward of the beach in the form of shore-parallel ridges. These are called foredunes and may rise several meters above the beach. Barrier islands that receive abundant sediment and tend to prograde seaward may have numerous foredune ridges.  See also: Dune

Low dunes or low areas between dunes may act as pathways for water and sediment during storm surges, producing washover fans on the landward, flat side of the barrier. This part of the barrier is generally only a meter or two above sea level and is covered with a floral community that extends from grasses in the high areas down to marsh grasses as the high intertidal zone is reached. Sediment that supports this vegetation is delivered in the form of washover fans which coalesce to form a washover apron—the landward part of the barrier. An individual fan may be about a half meter in thickness and extend over several acres. Large storms may generate sufficient surge to produce washover fans that traverse the entire barrier and extend into the adjacent back-barrier bay.

 

Marshes and tidal flats

 

These are the landward continuation of the back-barrier environment. Their extent tends to be related to the combination of tidal range and morphology of the island; generally the higher the tidal range, the wider the back-barrier marsh and tidal-flat complex.

 

Coastal bay

 

The coastal bay that separates the barrier island from the mainland may take on various characteristics. In many areas it is an estuary, a bay that is diluted by fresh-water runoff from streams and that has good tidal circulation with the open ocean. Examples are found behind the Outer Banks barrier system of North Carolina and the barriers of the Florida Gulf Coast. The other extreme is a coastal bay that is a lagoon with no significant fresh-water input and very restricted tidal flux. Examples are Laguna Madre behind Padre Island on the southern Texas coast, and the Coorong lagoon in South Australia—both well over 100 km (60 mi) long. Some barrier systems include coastal bays that have important seasonal variation in their hydrography.

 

Inlets

 

The continuity of barriers is interrupted by inlets, which carry great quantities of water and sediment between the open marine environment and the coastal bays. Inlet spacing, size, and stability vary, depending upon the dominant processes controlling barrier island morphology. Inlets may be closely spaced such as along the Georgia and South Carolina coasts, or they may be widely spaced such as on the Outer Banks of North Carolina and on the Texas coast.

 

 

Processes

 

A variety of physical processes occur along the coast. These processes act to shape and maintain the barrier island system and also to enable the barrier to slowly migrate landward as sea level rises. The most important process in forming and maintaining barriers is the waves, which also produce longshore currents and rip currents. Waves and longshore currents dominate the outer portion of the barrier system, whereas tidal currents are dominant landward of the barrier, although small waves may also be present. Tidal currents also dominate inlet processes, although waves also may influence this environment. On the supratidal portion of the barrier island, the wind is the most dominant physical process.

 

Waves

 

Normal waves that cross the inner shelf and break in the surf zone do not cause significant sediment motion until they steepen and break in shallow water, typically over a longshore bar. Such breaking causes much sediment to be temporarily suspended and generates local currents that may carry sediment toward or away from the shore. Storm waves cause sediment motion in relatively deep water. They also tend to remove sediment from the beach and transport it seaward. The reverse situation exists during low-wave-energy conditions. Examples of this condition occur seasonally along much of the west coast of the United States. The winter storms produce large waves which remove sediment from the beaches and transport it offshore, where it is stored until the lower-wave-energy conditions of the spring. The sediment then returns and the beach is restored. This cycle of erosional and accretional beach is common globally and is related to stormy versus quiet wave conditions.

Waves rarely approach the coast with the crests parallel to the shore. Instead, they approach at some acute angle and are refracted, thereby generating longshore currents that flow away from the acute angle made by the wave and the coast. These currents are the primary mechanism for distribution of sediment along the barrier beach and surf zone. Longshore or littoral drift may cause a net transport of hundreds of thousands of cubic meters of sediment to pass a given point in a year's time. Waves and longshore currents, in concert with nearshore topography, cause formation of rip currents that may transport sediment seaward. These currents are produced by the temporary piling up of water between the inner longshore bar and the beach. This unstable condition causes water to flow seaward, and the water does so through low areas of the bar. These narrow currents are quite local but may be dangerous to swimmers.  See also: Ocean waves

 

Tides

 

Tidal currents carry great quantities of water and sediment through the inlets and to a lesser extent in the estuaries landward of the barrier islands. Much sediment is deposited just landward of the inlet as a flood-tidal delta. The equivalent seaward accumulation, the ebb-tidal delta, varies greatly in size and shape, depending on wave and tidal interactions. Along many barriers, waves produce longshore currents that cause inlets to migrate or even close; these are wave-dominated inlets. By contrast, other inlets have strong tidal currents that cut deep and stable inlets which show little wave influence; these are tide-dominated inlets.

Tides are also important landward of the barriers in the estuaries, marshes, and tidal flats. Currents generated by tides are a primary mechanism for moving sediment both in suspension and as bedload. Flooding of low areas by tides provides a means for depositing sediment on the marsh or tidal flat. Typically the rate of tidal sediment flux is directly related to the tidal range.  See also: Ocean circulation

 

Wind

 

The wind is also an important agent for sediment transport and therefore for molding barrier island morphology. Prevailing winds along the coast typically have some onshore component. The backbeach zone, or at low tide the entire beach, serves as a sediment source for onshore winds that accumulate this sediment behind the beach in the form of dunes. Wind also causes sediment to blow from the dunes back on the washover apron or marsh and also directly into the bay. Along parts of Padre Island in southern Texas, wind has blown so much sediment into Laguna Madre that it is essentially filled.  See also: Nearshore processes; Wind

 

 

Sediment budget

 

The combined processes operating in the various sedimentary environments of the barrier island complex are best viewed through a sediment budget (Fig. 2). There are two distinct sources of sediment for this system (excluding biogenic or skeletal debris): the bays and the shoreface. Both of these environments receive feedback from other environments also. Shoreface sediment is transferred primarily to the beach, with small amounts going directly to the inlet. Beach sediment moves toward four sites: dunes, alongshore to inlets, over the barrier by storm washover, or seaward to the shoreface. Dunes also serve as a sediment source for washover fans, and they contribute as well to the back-island environments and bays through eolian transport of sediment. The marshes and other low-relief, back-island areas receive sediment from several sources, but do not provide sediment except in the case of severe storms, such as hurricanes, when even these low-energy environments are eroded.

 

 

Fig. 2  Sediment budget for barrier island complex. Solid lines are major interactions; broken lines are relatively minor intersections.

 

 

 

fig 2

 

 

 

The coastal bays show great variability in the sediment budget. Those bays that have little or no runoff from land or receive little tidal influence (lagoons) have little sediment input except from washover and blowover. Many bays receive much sediment runoff from the mainland and are subjected to pronounced tidal influence (estuaries). These bays provide sediment to marshes and tidal flats and some to inlets. They receive sediment from the same sources as lagoons, with the addition of inlets.

 

Morphodynamics

 

The response of the barrier island system to the above processes results in various sizes and shapes of barriers and their related inlets. These morphodynamics are dictated primarily by the interaction of wave- and tide-generated processes. Barrier islands are restricted to wave-dominated coasts and to coasts where there is a mixture of wave and tide influence. Tide-dominated coasts do not permit barrier islands to develop, due to the dominance of on- and offshore flux. Barrier islands on wave-dominated coasts are long and narrow with abundant and widespread washover fans (Fig. 3a). Inlets tend to be widely spaced, small, and unstable due to the dominance of waves primarily through longshore currents.

 

 

Fig. 3  Maps showing major coastal environments and directions, and directions of coastal processes of (a) wave-dominated barrier islands and (b) mixed-energy barrier islands. Large arrows indicate wave direction, and small arrows indicate direction of sediment transport. (After S. P. Leatherman, ed., Barrier Islands from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico, Academic Press, 1979)

 

 

 

fig 3

 

 

 

Mixed-energy coasts produce barrier island systems that have short islands that are wide at one end with large, fairly stable inlets resulting from the combination of wave and tide influence (Fig. 3b). Strong tidal currents in the inlets develop a substantial ebb-tidal delta that has an outer lobe smoothed by wave action. As waves are refracted around the ebb delta, there is a zone of longshore current reversal downdrift of the regional littoral drift direction. This condition causes sediment to become trapped and accumulate as prograding beach ridges. The remainder of the island is wave-dominated and is served by longshore currents moving in the direction of regional littoral drift. This part of the barrier island tends to be narrow and characterized by washover fans. Mixed-energy barriers have been termed drumstick barriers because of this shape.

 

Sediments and sedimentary structures

 

Although the barrier island system contains a broad spectrum of sediment types and sedimentary structures, each sedimentary environment can be characterized by its own suite. Knowledge of how these features formed and their spatial relationships with one another is important in recognizing and interpreting ancient barrier island systems preserved in the rock record.

The outer shoreface is typically composed of muddy sand or sandy mud with thin layers of sand. Bioturbation is nearly ubiquitous, and the surface may have inactive ripples or an irregular undulating surface from a previous storm. Discrete sand layers may show small-scale ripple cross-stratification and are related to storm events. The inner shoreface or nearshore zone displays great variety in sedimentary structures and has generally moderately to well sorted sand which may be a mixture of terrigenous and biogenic particles. Bedforms include symmetrical, wave-formed, two-dimensional ripples in the outer part, with three-dimensional megaripples on the seaward side of the longshore bars, where waves steepen producing combined flow conditions, and plane beds near the bar crests, where waves break. This sequence is repeated as each of the longshore bars is traversed by waves. The result is a complex but predictable pattern of bedforms and corresponding stratification types. Rip channels have seaward-oriented bedforms and cross-stratification due to the seaward transport of sediment in this localized environmnent.

The distinct zones within the beach also are readily distinguishable by their sediments and structures. Foreshore sediments are generally moderately to well sorted sand or gravel. Sorting values increase from worst to best from the base of the foreshore to the berm crest. Stratification is pronounced and slopes seaward at angles generally less that 7 or 8°. The great dynamics of this environment and the pronounced temporal changes in energy levels cause a range in the size of sediment particles deposited at any given time; some layers are sand, some are shell hash, and some are a combination. Erosion on the beach is typically marked by lag accumulations of dark, heavy minerals, resulting in thin layers of such minerals as zircon, garnet, magnetite, and rutile.

The backbeach is more uniformly finer-grained and better sorted that the adjacent foreshore. This is a response to eolian-dominated conditions, which may produce a thin surface deflation pavement of shell debris. Stratification is nearly horizontal and may be disrupted by burrows of various arthropods.

Dunes on the barrier island are characterized by fine, well-sorted sand which is dominantly quartz but may also contain carbonate shell debris. Dunes show the highest sorting values in the barrier system. There is a general trend of decreasing grain size and increasing sorting from the lower foreshore to the dunes. The surface of dunes is commonly covered with small wind-generated ripples. Internal stratification is dominated by large-scale cross-stratification formed as the active portion of the dune migrates. Dips range widely from about 10° to greater than 30°; generally a particular barrier is characterized by a given range in cross-stratification dips. Azimuths of the cross-stratification typically reflect prevailing and predominant wind directions.

The low-lying, back-island area is composed of moderately sorted sand dominated by horizontal, plane-bed stratification developed under sheet flow conditions of washover deposition. Roots and benthic invertebrates may destroy some of the stratification. Algal-mat-covered wind tidal flats may be widespread in the supratidal zone of some back-barrier areas. The blue-green algae stabilize the sediment under normal conditions but are torn up during storms, thereby permitting erosion by storm surge waters.

Marshes act as efficient sediment traps and contain a combination of mud, plant debris, and sand. Suspended sediment is transported onto the marsh as the tide rises, especially during storm surge conditions. Particles settle, and are trapped by the grass, resulting in slow accumulation of sediment. Washover fans may encroach upon the marsh, providing sand layers within the peaty muds.

Tidal flats receive sediment as the tides rise and fall, bringing both bedload sand and suspended mud. These sediments commonly accumulate in thin alternations, forming tidal bedding. The subtidal portion of the estuaries associated with barrier islands tends to be dominated by mud with variable amounts of terrigenous sand and shell gravel. Oyster shell debris is an important constituent of many low-energy estuaries, such as along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States. Some estuaries are influenced by strong tidal currents and have coarser sediment with bedforms, such as the Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Lagoons accumulate little terrigenous sediment because of the lack of mechanisms to transport it. Biogenic material and the precipitation of carbonate and evaporite minerals in some lagoons provide most of the sediment, with some contribution from both washover and blowover.

Inlets contain a wide variety of sediment texture and bedforms. Cross-stratification ranges from small-scale to large-scale, depending on the size of the bedforms present. A generally bimodal direction to this cross-stratification may be present, representing flooding and ebbing tidal currents.

 

Management

 

Continued pressures of growing populations have caused increased development of barrier islands, primarily for residential, commercial, and tourism purposes. This development along with the apparent increase in the rate of sea-level rise over the past several decades is causing severe problems. Natural barrier island processes include landward migration as washover occurs, and many tidal inlets tend to migrate along the coast. Construction of buildings, roads, and other infrastructure tends to lend some degree of permanence to barrier islands in that these structures are not designed to move as the island environments migrate.

Stabilization caused by structures commonly causes problems in various ways. Seawalls are designed to protect buildings or other structures from wave attack and coastal erosion. They also prohibit washover and landward migration, and commonly fail as wave action scours underneath them. Because of their nature, they prevent beaches from developing as barrier island retreat takes place. Structures that are perpendicular to the coast, such as groins and jetties, interrupt the littoral drift of sediment along the coast. These structures cause considerable sediment to pile up on their updrift side and result in erosion on the downdrift side because of lack of sediment supply. This situation is much like the sediment that is impounded behind a dam in a reservoir. Jetties are similar in their nature and are typically large because of their role in inlet stabilization. These concrete and rip-rap structures do a good job, but in the process they are also effective sediment traps on the updrift side, and the downdrift side of the inlet suffers serious erosion problems due to lack of sediment. Several locations around the United States now have sediment-bypassing systems to counteract this problem, but they are costly and commonly inoperable due to mechanical problems. New technology is needed to provide more efficient sand transfer across structured inlets.

There are federal, state, and local zoning restrictions on construction type and location, and other management programs that are in place. Most states have zoning that restricts construction on barriers through the implementation of some type of minimum setback from the active beach and dune environment. Some also prohibit seawalls and have limitations on rebuilding after loss due to storms. Extensive permitting procedures are involved in nearly all barrier island construction. New strict construction codes have resulted in tremendous reduction in structural damage due to severe storms such as hurricanes. Conditions associated with Hurricane Opal along the Florida panhandle coast in 1995 offer a good example. Of the nearly 2000 homes and other buildings along the open coast that were in the path of this storm, about 1000 incurred serious damage or were destroyed. Not one of the destroyed homes was built under recent construction codes, whereas homes built under these codes experienced no major damage.

Soft construction has become the primary method for protection of upland barrier properties. The most utilized approach is through beach nourishment, but various methods of constructing dunes and extensive vegetation programs are also common. All are designed to provide protection and stabilization to barrier environments while maintaining the esthetic appearance of the area and permitting natural processes to act on the islands.

Beach nourishment is expensive and temporary but has been effective in most places. This involves taking beach sand from a source location, generally offshore, and placing it on the beach in a specific design configuration. This solution typically costs a few million dollars per mile and lasts 5–10 years before additional nourishment is required. The cost of such projects is typically shared among federal, state, and local levels in decreasing proportions.

Although great strides have been made in coastal management over the past few decades, there is still a long way to go. Current regulations need to be enforced, and exceptions—which are too common—minimized. Like so many current environmental problems, the coastal zone is subjected to ever-increasing pressures of population and the related development. Barrier island systems are among the most affected.  See also: Coastal engineering

Richard A. Davis, Jr.

 

Bibliography

 

 

R. W. G. Carter and C. D. Woodroffe (eds.), Coastal Evolution, 1994

R. A. Davis, Jr. (ed.), Geology of Holocene Barrier Island Systems, 1994

M. L. Schwartz (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Beaches and Coastal Environments, 1982

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