The preservation of storm events in the geologic record of New Jersey, USA

Author:

Joyse Kristen M.12ORCID,Walker Jennifer S.3,Godfrey Linda2,Christie Margaret A.4ORCID,Shaw Timothy A.1,Corbett D. Reide5,Kopp Robert E.26,Horton Benjamin P.17

Affiliation:

1. Earth Observatory of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University Singapore

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Rutgers University Piscataway NJ USA

3. Department of Environmental Science Rowan University, Glassboro NJ USA

4. Department of Environmental Studies McDaniel College Westminster MD USA

5. Department of Coastal Studies East Carolina University, Wanchese NC USA

6. Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute, Rutgers University New Brunswick NJ USA

7. Asian School of the Environment, Nanyang Technological University Singapore

Abstract

ABSTRACTGeologic reconstructions of overwash events can extend storm records beyond the brief instrumental record. However, the return periods of storms calculated from geologic records alone may underestimate the frequency of events given the preservation bias of geologic records. Here, we compare a geologic reconstruction of storm activity from a salt marsh in New Jersey to two neighboring instrumental records at the Sandy Hook and Battery tide gauges. Eight overwash deposits were identified within the marsh's stratigraphy by their fan‐shaped morphology and coarser mean grain size (3.6 ± 0.7 φ) compared to autochthonous sediments they were embedded in (5.6 ± 0.8 φ). We used an age–depth model based on modern chronohorizons and three radiocarbon dates to provide age constraints for the overwash deposits. Seven of the overwash deposits were attributed to historical storms, including the youngest overwash deposit from Hurricane Sandy in 2012. The four youngest overwash deposits overlap with instrumental records. In contrast, the Sandy Hook and Battery tide gauges recorded eight and 11 extreme water levels above the 10% annual expected probability (AEP) of exceedance level, respectively, between 1932/1920 and the present. The geologic record in northern New Jersey, therefore, has a 36–50% preservation potential of capturing extreme water levels above the 10% AEP level.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Research Foundation Singapore

Ministry of Education - Singapore

Publisher

Wiley

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