Seismic signals in coastal dune systems

2008 ◽  
Vol 89 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 73-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Goff ◽  
Bruce McFadgen ◽  
Andrew Wells ◽  
Murray Hicks
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihaela Tudor ◽  
Ana Ramos-Pereira ◽  
Joana Gaspar de Freitas

<p>Coastal dunes are very complex systems and very sensitive to climatic variability and human actions. In Portugal, coastal dune fields have undergone major changes over historical times. The aim of the paper is focused on the coastal dune systems evolution over the last five centuries, natural and man induced (namely by deforestation and afforestation) and their transformation under the present global changes (sea level rise and coastal storms). The analysis of historical records and environmental data using a set of proxies recorded over the last 1,000 yrs, show intense aeolian activity and sand drift episodes during Little Age Period, causing serious problems for human settlements and agriculture. Coastal society have responded to the wind-blown sands fixing the dunes through afforestation. The process is well documented in the historical sources and many management measures, including abundant legislation, projects and reports were carried out by Portuguese authorities to avoid sand incursion inland.  According to the main report of the General Forest Administration, in the final of 18th century, was estimated an area of about 72 000 ha of free aeolian sands in need of afforestation. Thus, along Portuguese coastline, the dunes experienced a period of stability during the 20th century, due to planting of grasses and pine forest. This paper examines the pathways of the transgressive dune fields of the Central Western Portuguese coast, over various stages of coastal evolution. Mapping the morphological features between Mondego river mouth and Nazaré, using a combination of satellite images, aerial photographs and Lidar data we identified distinct phases of aeolian activity and landforms modification that were associated to climatic fluctuations. This coastal dune system is composed by a succession of different aeolian phases, including a littoral foredune, which lies inland with a complexity of morphologies with transverse and crescentic ridges, and also parabolic dunes. The results show that the dunes building and sand migration inland appears to be linked to the conditions of predominantly negative winter North Atlantic Oscillation index (NAOi), driven by climatic variability during Holocene/Antrhopocene. The consistency of intense sand drift episodes with abrupt cold events during Little Age Period, drastically reduced the area occupied by vegetation, causing changes in aeolian sedimentary processes. Thus, it seems that coastal dunes evolution over the past centuries have been controlled by the two-way interactions between natural conditions and human activities, shaping the Portuguese coastline. Placing historical evidence in a geographical perspective, we hope to fill the gaps in coastal zone dynamics, providing new insights of the human-landscape relationships to predict the future response of the coastal dune systems to human pressure and climate change.<br>Key-words: coastal dunes evolution, geomorphological features, sand drift, anthropogenic impacts, climatic fluctuation, Western Portugal.</p>


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