Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 11

Figure 3. Barrier islands with a drumstick shape receive much of their sand supply from large ebb-tidal deltas formed by outgoing tides within the adjacent inlet. (Image modified from Hayes, 1979) that leads to accretion rather than having net erosion, and wave and tidal processes distribute the available sands to modify the island’s geomorphology. When a wave breaks, its stored energy is released, providing the force to transport sand. As a wave washes up onto the beach (called the swash), sand is carried with it. Gravity then causes the water to flow down the beach’s slope toward the sea. Sand grains are carried with this backwash (Figure 2). Since waves most often approach a shoreline at an angle, a sand grain travels at an angle up the beach during the swash, and down the slope during the backwash. The grain does not return to its point of origin, but instead is transported a short distance along the length of the beach. The next wave picks up the sand grain and again carries it up the beach at an angle, and the backwash moves it downslope. With the passage of hundreds of angled breaking waves, a sand grain zig-zags its way down the length of the shoreline, a process known as longshore transport (also referred to as longshore drift). The direction of longshore transport is often referred to as the downdrift direction—similar to a river’s downstream direction. You may have experienced the related longshore current while swimming or floating on a raft near to shore, and the current has dragged you far down the shoreline from your beach towel! Longshore transport and longshore current are continual processes as long as waves are approaching the shoreline at an angle. If wave direction and angle change, the longshore transport is affected. Larger waves release more energy, and the longshore transport energy is greater. Along the South Carolina coast, the stronger and larger sediment-transporting waves occur during storms. Since most storms that approach and SUMMER/FALL 2018 • VOLUME 40 attack our beaches arrive from the northeast, the overall longshore transport direction for most of the S. C. coast is generally north-to-south. Later in this article you’ll see how extremely influential this longshore transport direction is in determining the overall geomorphology of many of our barrier islands, including Kiawah. The role of tides along a barrier coast is most important in the breaks between the islands referred to as inlets. Inlets are the channels that allow tidal waters to flow landward during the rising, or flood tide, and seaward during the falling, or ebb tide. Along the SC coast, two high-low-high tidal cycles occur daily, and at Kiawah, the vertical difference in the water’s height between high and low tides, referred to as the tidal range, varies between 5.5 and 7.0 feet. The result of this moderately large tidal range is that twice a day a large volume of water moves very swiftly through inlets in each direction! Because inlets are narrow and constrict the water flow (similar to placing your thumb over the end of a garden hose nozzle), inlet tidal currents can be dangerously strong, and have the ability to transport a tremendous amount of sand. During an ebb tide, sand is carried seaward. These tidal currents run into the landward-flowing waves and, similar to a head-on collision, the tidal water’s flow is slowed significantly. With the reduced energy from the colliding tidal and wave energies, sands that were being transported settle to the seafloor. Over time, a lobe of sand is constructed seaward of the inlet. This submerged lobe, called an ebb-tidal delta, is an enormous body of sand that can supply longshore transported sand to the adjacent downdrift barrier island. Stono Inlet on Kiawah’s northeast end provides a tremendous natural source of sand to Kiawah Island. 9