Sound‐Side Inundation and Seaward Erosion of a Barrier Island During Hurricane Landfall

Author:

Sherwood Christopher R.1ORCID,Ritchie Andrew C.2,Over Jin‐Si R.1ORCID,Kranenburg Christine J.3ORCID,Warrick Jonathan A.2ORCID,Brown Jenna A.4ORCID,Wright C. Wayne5ORCID,Aretxabaleta Alfredo L.1ORCID,Zeigler Sara L.3ORCID,Wernette Phillipe A.2ORCID,Buscombe Daniel D.6ORCID,Hegermiller Christie A.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center Woods Hole MA USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center Santa Cruz CA USA

3. U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center St. Petersburg FL USA

4. U.S. Geological Survey Maryland‐Delaware‐District of Columbia Water Science Center Dover DE USA

5. C.W. Wright Consulting, Inc. Tampa FL USA

6. Marda Science Contractor to the U.S. Geological Survey Santa Cruz CA USA

7. Now at Sofar Ocean San Francisco CA USA

Abstract

AbstractBarrier islands are especially vulnerable to hurricanes and other large storms, owing to their mobile composition, low elevations, and detachment from the mainland. Conceptual models of barrier‐island evolution emphasize ocean‐side processes that drive landward migration through overwash, inlet migration, and aeolian transport. In contrast, we found that the impact of Hurricane Dorian (2019) on North Core Banks, a 36‐km barrier island on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, was primarily driven by inundation of the island from Pamlico Sound, as evidenced by storm‐surge model results and observations of high‐water marks and wrack lines. Analysis of photogrammetry products from aerial imagery collected before and after the storm indicate the loss of about 18% of the subaerial volume of the island through the formation of over 80 erosional washout channels extending from the marsh and washover platform, through gaps in the foredunes, to the shoreline. The washout channels were largely co‐located with washover fans deposited by earlier events. Net seaward export of sediment resulted in the formation of deltaic bars offshore of the channels, which became part of the post‐storm berm recovery by onshore bar migration and partial filling of the washouts with washover deposits within 2 months. This event represents a volumetric setback in the overwash/rollover behavior required for barrier transgression, but the new ponds and lowland habitats may provide beneficial habit for endangered species and will likely persist for years.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics

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