Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

10.1016/s0967-0653(97)84057-4

10

Citations

7

References

2000

Year

Abstract

The high tidal flat of Komso Bay shows a typical chenier or shelly sand ridge, about 860 m long, 30-60 m wide, and up to 1.8 m high. Vertical sections of trenches across the chenier show gently landward-dipping interbeds of coarse to medium-grained shelly sands. Based on aerial photographs taken for the penod of 1967-1989, sand shoals on the tidal mudflat migrated landward to form the chenier. Typhoon Ted In 1992, entering the southeastern Yellow Sea, forced the chenier to migrate further inland, resulting in a displacement of up to 11 m in a few days. Field measurements on the morphology of the chenier over a two-year period from 1990-1992 indicated that winter storms are chiefly responsible for the migration at a rate of 4-5 m per year. These facts suggest that strong waves and currents under the conditions of typhoons and/ or storms have dominantly forced the chenier to migrate landward onto the muddy high tidal flat.

References

YearCitations

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