Barrier dynamics and landward migration with Holocene sea-level rise Article

Leatherman, SP. (1983). Barrier dynamics and landward migration with Holocene sea-level rise . NATURE, 301(5899), 415-417. 10.1038/301415a0

cited authors

  • Leatherman, SP

abstract

  • Barrier beaches (islands and spits) have become the subject of mounting interest1,2 due to human development on these land-forms. It is commonly thought that barrier beaches continuously migrate landward in response to sea-level rise, often by over-wash processes, maintain mass through time, and that these processes are occurring at a rate commensurate with human (100 yr) time frames. While some barriers are naturally migrating quite rapidly 3,4, other barriers decidedly are not. Here I present data which illustrate that many US Atlantic Coast barriers are not evolving over the short term in accordance with generally accepted hypotheses and argue that the presumed norm may actually be the exception. © 1983 Nature Publishing Group.

publication date

  • December 1, 1983

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 415

end page

  • 417

volume

  • 301

issue

  • 5899