Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8912008 | Marine Geology | 2018 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
The three shoreline systems identified show marked differences that relate to sea level change and the influence of the underlying topography. Shoreline 1 (Pleistocene highstand) developed by localised wave-reworking of delta deposits and involved a series of alongshore-prograding barrier spits on a shoreline of alternating high-relief bedrock and littoral sands in coastal re-entrants. Shoreline 2 (â 50Â m) was a major accumulation of beach and dune sand deposited as a mainland-attached beach dune system on a low-lying coastal plain environment. Shoreline 3 (the modern coast) comprises a series of headland-embayment beaches, strandplains and transgressive dunes with a strong bedrock control and a well-developed longshore drift system delivering sediment northward.
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Authors
J.A.G. Cooper, R.P. Meireles, A.N. Green, A.H.F. Klein, E.E. Toldo,