
PHYSICAL PROCESSES AND SEDIMENT FLUX THROUGH REEF-LAGOON SYSTEMS
Author(s) -
Harry H. Roberts
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
proceedings of conference on coastal engineering/proceedings of ... conference on coastal engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2156-1028
pISSN - 0589-087X
DOI - 10.9753/icce.v17.58
Subject(s) - reef , crest , breaking wave , oceanography , geology , sediment , wave height , energy flux , fringing reef , surge , wind wave , flux (metallurgy) , shoaling and schooling , sediment transport , coral reef , environmental science , geomorphology , wave propagation , physics , materials science , quantum mechanics , astronomy , metallurgy
Studies of physical processes in reef-lagoon systems continue to emphasize the importance of waves and wave-induced currents at the reef crest as agents of sediment transport to backreef environments. These across-the-reef currents are also largely responsible for driving backreef lagoon circulation. Rapid energy transformations associated with the process of wave breaking at the reef crest are responsible for strong reef-normal surge currents. Estimates of energy loss, as determined by wave height changes caused by wave breaking, can be as high as 70-80%' for discontinuous reefs and >90% for continuous examples. The amount of energy loss is related to depth of water over the reef crest, a function of reef topography and tidal regime. Low-tide conditions promote the greatest incident wave modification and attenuation as a result of increased breaking-wave intensity. Under trade-wind conditions found in the Caribbean, surge currents of 50-80 cm/sec for durations of 2-6 sec are common in a low to moderate wave-energy setting (4-6 sec input waves, 40- 50 cm average heights). Sediments through the sand sizes up to pebbles are easily transported lagoonward by these periodic bursts of energy. Flow in shallow backreef lagoons (generally