EP22A-02
Memory in coastal systems: Post-tsunami beach recovery within a decade on the Thai coast.
Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 10:35
2005 (Moscone West)
Adam Switzer1,2, Chris Gouramanis3, Charles S Bristow4, Kruawun Jankaew5, Charles Martin Rubin1,2, Yingsin Lee6, Stephen Carson6, Dat Tien Pham1,2 and Sorvigenaleon Ildefonso6, (1)Earth Observatory of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore, (2)Nanyang Technological University, The Asian School of Environment, Singapore, Singapore, (3)Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore, (4)Birkbeck, London, Singapore, (5)Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand, (6)Earth Observatory of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
Abstract:
Do coastlines have memory? In this study we used a combination of remote sensing, field surveys and Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to reconstruct the recovery of beaches at Phra Thong Island, Thailand. The study site was severely impacted by the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. Here we show that within a decade the beaches have completely recovered without any human intervention. We apply GPR to image periods of aggradation, progradation and washover sedimentation and match these with local events including a storm in 2007. At one location the beach has locally prograded at least 10m after partially blocking the mouth of a creek that was reamed out by the retreating tsunami. Here we also used GPR to image the scour and recovery of the coastal system (see figure). The rapid recovery of the barrier beach and local progradation indicate that sediment scoured by the tsunami was not transported far offshore but remained in the littoral zone within reach of fair-weather waves that returned to the beach naturally. In both cases coastal processes have reconstructed the beach-dune system to an almost identical pre-tsunami state in under a decade.