Monitoring of Recovery Process at Yeongildae Beach, South Korea, Using a Video System SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 3 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 3 time in Scopus
Title
Monitoring of Recovery Process at Yeongildae Beach, South Korea, Using a Video System
Author(s)
Oh, Jung Eun; Jeong, Weon Mu; Ryu, Kyong Ho; Park, Jin-Young; Chang, Yeon S.
KIOST Author(s)
Jeong, Weon Mu(정원무)Ryu, Kyong Ho(류경호)Chang, Yeon S.(장연식)
Alternative Author(s)
오정은; 정원무; 류경호; 장연식
Publication Year
2021-11
Abstract
Once a beach is eroded by storm waves, it is generally recovered under milder wave conditions. To prevent or reduce damage, it is therefore important to understand the characteristics of the site-specific recovery process. Here, we present the results, based on a data set from a video monitoring system and wave measurements, of the recovery process in a pocketed beach located inside a bay where the shoreline retreated harshly (~12 m, on average, of beach width) during Typhoon TAPAH (T1917) in September 2019. It took about 1.5 years for the beach to be recovered to the level before the typhoon. During this period, the erosion and accretion were repeated, with the pattern highly related to the wave power (Pw); most of the erosion occurred when Pw became greater than 30 kWatt/m, whereas the accretion prevailed when Pw was no greater than 10 kWatt/m. The recovery pattern showed discrepancies between different parts of the beach. The erosion during storm events was most severe in the southern part, whereas the northern shoreline did not significantly change even during TAPAH (T1917). In contrast, the recovery process occurred almost equally at all locations. This discrepancy in the erosion/accretion process was likely due to human intervention, as a shadow zone was formed in the northern end due to the breakwaters, causing disequilibrium in the sediment transport gradient along the shore. The results in this study could be applied in designing the protection plans from severe wave attacks by effectively estimating the size of coastal structures and by correctly arranging the horizontal placement of such interventions or beach nourishment. Although the application of these results should be confined to this specific site, the method using wave energy parameters as criteria can be considered in other areas with similar environments, for future planning of beach protection.
ISSN
2076-3417
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/41735
DOI
10.3390/app112110195
Bibliographic Citation
Applied Sciences-basel, v.11, no.21, 2021
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
beach erosion; storm waves; recovery process; video monitoring; pocket beach
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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