Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,503,364 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Surf vs. sand: U.S. beaches are washing out to sea. Can engineers save the shore without ruining the waves? (Earth: beaches/erosion).


Surfing buffs have a word for the perfect wave--"tubular." A wave curls into a tube and surfers ride inside it toward shore. But the endless pounding of surf can really grind down a beach. "About 86 percent of U.S. shoreline is eroding [washing away]," says Chad Nelson, environmental director of the Surfrider Foundation.

The reasons are many: Damming rivers and building coastal structures cause some harm. And the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  thinks higher concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is causing Earth's temperature to warm, which in turn could raise sea level a few feet in the next century. Bye-bye beaches?

Not if geologists or engineers can help it. But beach lovers are divided over how to best halt coastal erosion Coastal erosion see also (beach evolution) is the wearing away of land or the removal of beach or dune sediments by wave action, tidal currents, wave currents, or drainage. . Why? Because tactics that keep sand where sunbathers want it can also wipe out the wave action in the surf zone, the area between the outermost out·er·most  
adj.
Most distant from the center or inside; outmost.


outermost
Adjective

furthest from the centre or middle

Adj. 1.
 breakers and the shore. Can human ingenuity save the day?

SAND DAMS

Sand is always on the move. While wave action erodes the coastline in one place, the littoral littoral /lit·to·ral/ (lit´ah-r'l) pertaining to the shore of a large body of water.

littoral

pertaining to the shore.
 drift (current running parallel to shore) eventually deposits the sand elsewhere. "When a beach erodes, the sand doesn't disappear," says coastal geologist Susan D. Halsey of the Stevens Institute of Technology Stevens is known for its rigorous engineering, science, and technological management curricula. Among the prominent research centers of Stevens is the Davidson Laboratory, Wireless Network Security Center, Keck Geotechnical Laboratory, Plasma Physics Laboratory, Nicoll Environmental  in Hoboken, New Jersey Hoboken is a city in Hudson County, New Jersey, United States. Geography

Hoboken is located at 40°44'41" North, 74°1'59" West (40.744851, -74.032941).GR1
. "It's just moved to other spots--either on shore or the seafloor."

The trouble is, most sunbathers and surfers don't want nature to move their beaches. So to make sand stay put, engineers use various but controversial methods. One example: They construct large stone structures called jetties perpendicular to the coastline to dam the sand flow along shore. While sand gathers on the up-current side of the jetty jetty: see coast protection. , the down-current side erodes. Although the sand-bars that form in the process can create good surf, "jetties can cause the thinning or even disappearance of beaches," Nelson says.

Another anti-erosion tactic: beach nourishment. Engineers have pumped sand ashore to raise and widen beaches from Florida to New Jersey. Dumping tons of sand creates more towel space, but surfers complain it often smothers the very beach shape that makes for good waves (see diagram, page 13).

SHORE BREAKERS

Waves form when wind blows on the surface of the ocean, thousands of miles from a beach. In fact, waves that reach California in summer arrive from storms generated as far as 8,000 kilometers (5,000 miles) to the south. As swells roll nearer to shore, friction (rubbing force) with the seabed slows them down. The distance between the waves' crests, or peaks, shortens, and the heights of waves increase. As water at the top of each wave overtakes the bottom, it topples forward and breaks.

What makes a wave break in a surfable way? "The exact conditions are subtle," Nelson says. "Usually it's a feature (jargon) it's a feature - From the adage "It's not a bug, it's a feature." Used sarcastically to describe an unpleasant experience that you wish to gloss over.  on the ocean floor, like a rocky reef or sandbar sandbar
 or offshore bar

Submerged or partly exposed ridge of sand or coarse sediment that is built by waves offshore from a beach. The swirling turbulence of waves breaking off a beach excavates a trough in the sandy bottom.
." When the bottom of a wave strikes a reef, the top of the wave pitches over--like when you trip and fall. If beach nourishment smoothes these features, good surfing waves are history.

FUTURE WAVE

The rocky reefs that create gnarly (jargon) gnarly - /nar'lee/ Both obscure and hairy. "Yow! - the tuned assembler implementation of BitBlt is really gnarly!" From a similar but less specific usage in surfer slang.  waves could yield a solution to coastal erosion for both sunbathers: and surfers. "Certain man-made structures create good surf spots," says avid surfer David Skelly Skel´ly

v. i. 1. To squint.
n. 1. A squint.
, president of Skelly Engineering. The firm built an experimental 18-ton surfing reef 100 yards off a Los Angeles beach. The V-shape structure is made of 150 giant sandbags sandbags

small sacks containing sand used to support an anesthetized animal in dorsal recumbency and prevent it from rolling sideways during anesthesia or surgery.
 (or geotubes) and lies parallel to the shoreline in 15-foot-deep water. When waves hit the reef, they break. "When you change the surf, you change the way energy is delivered to the shoreline," Skelly says. "By forcing waves to break farther from shore, the reef can reduce beach erosion."

Skelly's artificial reef has generated such a swell of interest there are plans for two or more off the California coast. Surf's up?

DEBATE IT

Should engineers shore up sand at the expense of good surfing waves? Why or why not?

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Did You Know?

* Rivers carry grains of sediment from inland mountains and bluffs to the oceans. Those grains eventually wash up on beaches--unless, of course, dams or other structures trap the sediment first.

* Beach nourishment can turn a beach into an obstacle course for nesting sea turtles.

* Waves move energy, not water. Picture a seagull seagull

a noisy, gregarious bird that frequents the seashore. Web-footed, hook-billed, white with gray wings. Member of the family Laridae and of the genus Larus.
 bobbing on windswept wind·swept  
adj.
Exposed to or swept by winds: windswept moors.


windswept
Adjective

1.
 water. The bird remains more or less in one place as wave after wave passes beneath it.

Cross-Curricular Connection

Geography: Challenge students to research and create a map showing how U.S. coastlines have changed over the last 20 to 30 years.

Critical Thinking: No two beaches have the same exact needs: Tactics that help one beach might harm another. How should federal, state, and local authorities work together to manage beaches? Choose a beach and think of a plan.

Surf vs. Sand

Directions: Solve the clues below to complete this crossword puzzle.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

1. Sandbags: --.

2. Rubbing force: --.

3. A littoral drift is a current running -- to shore.

4. Large stone structures perpendicular to coastline used to dam sand flow: --

5. Beach -- : adding sand to raise and widen coastline.

6. Attracting forces between two objects: --.

7. Surface tension is the clinging force on the surface of a --.

8. Beach mineral: --

9. Particles too small to be classified as sand are called clay or --.

10. Particles too large to be classified as sand: --.

Bonus: Use the letters in parentheses See parenthesis.

parentheses - See left parenthesis, right parenthesis.
 to spell the bonus words.

Surf Vocabulary 101

A. A beginner or a non-surfer: -- d

B. Rider who surfs with right foot as lead foot: -- foot

VOCABULARY BUILDER, P. TE5

1. geotubes 2. friction 3. parallel 4. jetties 5. nourishment 6. gravity 7. liquid 8. quartz 9. silt 10. gravel Bonus: A. hodad B. goofy

Resources

To learn more about beach erosion, visit this Web site: www.erosion.com/

To learn more about artificial reefs, visit this Web site: www.asrltd.co.nz/reefs.html
COPYRIGHT 2003 Scholastic, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Masibay, Kim Y.
Publication:Science World
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 9, 2003
Words:985
Previous Article:The plight of the turtle. (Life science: conservation/ecology)(Cover Story).
Next Article:Name that element! This element rules the computer age. You'll find it in most of Earth's soil, sand, and rocks--not to mention everything from PC...
Topics:



Related Articles
Sending out an S.O.S. (Save Our Seas)(includes related articles) (Special Earth Day Action Issue: Make Waves)
BEACHES GOING, GOING, GONE?(U.S. shoreline is eroding)
Enjoy the beach ... while it's still there.(Brief Article)
NEW JERSEY'S BEACHES: On Shifting Sands.(Brief Article)
SURF'S UP BIG SWELLS GREAT TO RIDE, BUT THEY MAY SPELL TROUBLE FOR COAST DWELLERS.(News)(Statistical Data Included)
EL NINO STORMS BLAMED FOR ERODING COASTAL BLUFFS.(News)
COUNTY DIGS IN TO GUARD BEACH AGAINST SURF.(NEWS)
Have fun, but use caution at coast.(General News)(Surf: Beach safety specialists warn of unforeseen dangers and hope to prevent tragedies.)
Expert warns barriers cause beach to recede.(Environment)
Beach bound: according to Dr. Beach, our coastlines are in jeopardy.(American Beaches)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles