First-order controls of extreme-storm impacts on the Mississippi-Alabama Barrier-Island chain

Journal of Coastal Research
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Abstract

Predicting the morphological impacts and associated hazards of extreme storms on barrier islands is facilitated by examining historical poststorm images and identifying the predominant alongshore and cross-shore patterns of erosion and deposition for different island segments. Morphological changes on the Mississippi–Alabama barrier-island chain produced by 12 Category 3 and stronger hurricanes since 1852 were analyzed to investigate whether barrier-island responses to extreme storms are controlled primarily by local geomorphic conditions or primarily by storm characteristics. Results of those analyses demonstrate that (1) antecedent topography and geomorphic conditions (island width, land elevations, nearshore bathymetry, subaqueous-boundary conditions) tend to exert greater control on local barrier-island impacts than storm parameters (path, intensity, wind speeds, water levels, shelf duration), and (2) types and alongshore patterns of storm overwash and island breaching are commonly repeated for the same island segments. Even when impact patterns are identical, magnitudes of sequential impacts, such as the inland distance of sediment transport, are unequal and are controlled by storm parameters (water levels, wind speeds) that influence wave heights, overwash-flow depths, and current velocities.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title First-order controls of extreme-storm impacts on the Mississippi-Alabama Barrier-Island chain
Series title Journal of Coastal Research
DOI 10.2112/08-1152.1
Volume 2010
Issue 264
Year Published 2010
Language English
Publisher BioOne
Contributing office(s) St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center
Description 14 p.
First page 635
Last page 648
Country United States
State Alabama, Mississippi
Other Geospatial Barrier-Island chain
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