Nearshore Bedform Patterns: Lab Studies


Dickson, P. J., and Drake, T. G. 1996, Nearshore bedform pattern evolution: lab studies: EOS Transactions AGU, v. 77 (46), p.F420
Bedform patterns in the nearshore are relatively easily observed indicators of complex, difficult-to-measure fluid motion. Video observation of bedform pattern formation and evolution in a laboratory wave channel reveal several features of pattern evolution relevant to field and modeling studies. Patterns in coarse sand were generated in a 2.4-m-wide channel having uniform still-water depth of 70 cm using 5 s, 20-cm-high waves. Transport occurred primarily as bedload. Concrete megaripple forms one meter long having 20-cm-high, shoreward-facing, angle-of-repose slipfaces were placed in the bed for some experiments. Without fixed forms, two-dimensional ripples having mean spacing of 15 cm and mean height of 3 cm form and migrate onshore at about 1 cm/min. Ripple imperfections migrate onshore at about four times the ripple migration rate. Ripples in the vicinity of channel-spanning fixed bedforms behave differently. Immediately onshore of the megaripple crest, migration rates reach nearly 5 cm/min, then decrease rapidly to undisturbed rates at a distance of about 5 megaripple heights onshore. Areal number density of imperfections in perturbed regions decreases with time, and appears to obey a diffusion law. Imperfection migration heals perturbed regions of the bed, and creates domains of two-dimensional ripples bounded by thin regions having high imperfection densities. The size of such domains increases with time, and domain shape becomes increasingly equant.
Supported by the Office of Naval Research