News Release
Beach Sand Formations Tell Tales of Past Storms
Geologists have recently devised a new method for
reconstructing the history of severe storms along the coast: examine the steep
slopes and cliffs left behind when severe wind and water erode the beach. After
hurricanes and Nor’easters make landfall, they move and sculpt the sands into
“scarps” while leaving behind a distinct signature of different-sized sand grains. Intense winds blow away the
lightest and smallest grainssuch as quartz, feldspar, and
muscoviteand leave a surface enriched with heavier minerals such
as garnet, magnetite, and ilmenite. WHOI geologist Ilya Buynevich, working with
colleagues from Boston University
and the University of Nebraska,
recently used ground-penetrating radar to find these enriched scarps buried
along the coast of Maine. They
also collected sediment cores and used a novel technique known as optically
stimulated luminescencewhich uses the crystal structure of the sand, along
with a zap of radiation, to figure out when the scarps were last exposed to
sunlight at the surface. In the June issue of the journal Geology, Buynevich and colleagues describe how they reconstructed a
record of intense storm activity in the Gulf
of Maine. The scarps indicate there
was a massive storm about 1,600 years ago, followed by long quiet period, and
then a rise in storm activity in the past 400 years.
Related Links
» A 1,500 yr record of North Atlantic storm activity based on optically dated relict beach scarps
» Who is Ilya Buynevich?
» WHOI Coastal Systems Group
Originally published: May 1, 2007

