Showing posts with label sandbars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sandbars. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2012

Collection Report June 6, 2012

After six months of lull, nature re-awoke at Bay View beach on Sunday, June 3. I took my daughter to check out the high tide. But after seeing what it was doing, we didn't stay long.
My daughter enjoying the view & sea-foam for a moment
This was a no-name storm, little predicted before, little reported afterward. Inland, it was wet & windy, but unremarkable. At the shore, the violence was palpable. And hitting as it did at one of the month's highest high tides, it left this in its wake (pics from June 4):
Washed in from far away
In one or two hours, fierce waves completely remade a beach that had been slowly built up and shaped and tweaked over months. Different parts of the beach handled the onslaught differently.
Massive erosion against the seawalls
that protect homes S of my usual zones
While Bay View's advancing dune held
much sand steady even tho taking a hit
When a storm wave bangs against a seawall, the energy ricochets, hurling back toward the sea and pulling masses of sand with it. Meanwhile, dunegrass disperses much of that energy, sinking it into the sands and breaking it up, so less gets pulled back out to the deep. A seawall is a death knell to a beach. In the above picture, you can see the post stumps of an earlier seawall that had to be abandoned decades ago. How long will this one last?


As expected, the violence of the storm left much manmade litter behind, caught up in the dunes and higher ground:
Congrats, you landed.
Is this 2 pcs, or 2,000?
So when I did my full clean-up on Wed., June 6, what did I find? Well, Zone N:
136 finds:
  • Building materials: 0
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 114
  • Fishing misc.: 6 (2 buoys, 1 scrap buoy, 1 rope, 1 lobster claw band, 1 fishing line)
  • Food-related plastics: 5 (2 bottles, 1 gallon-sized juice jug, 2 bottlecaps)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 2 (aluminum can, beer bottle)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 8 (3 bag scraps, 4 balloons, 1 non-food packaging)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 0
  • Paper/wood: 0
  • Misc./unique: 1 (wine bottle cork - true cork)
The large chunks of foam aren't consumer-product foam. They're insulation and backing, ripped from structures somewhere far away. Almost all of this was up amid the dunegrass.

On to Zone S:
114 finds:
  • Building materials: 0
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 93
  • Fishing misc.: 6 (1 buoy, 2 buoy scraps, 1 plastic rope, 1 non-plastic rope bit, shotgun shell)
  • Food-related plastics: 4 (2 bottles, plastic cork, straw)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 1 (aluminum can)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 9 (4 bag scraps, shoulder strap cushion, 2 flip-flops, mixing cup, insulin syringe)
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 0
  • Paper/wood: 1 (wood fence slat)
  • Misc./unique: 0
More of the structural foam. More of the same everything. (The syringe with its very sharp needle poking out was sobering.) There was little difference between Zones N & S this week -- the storm saw to that!

Sooner or later, every shoreline wakes from its occasional "dream of peace." Bay View woke up on June 3, 2012. The sandbar that spent months approaching, and finally beaching -- building cusps higher than even the fronts of the dunes by May -- was obliterated in a few hours. The shoreface utterly scoured & changed in the blink of an eye.

The ocean is a pitiless, wondrous thing.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Collection Report April 25, 2012

Wednesday, April 25. 9:15AM. 55 degrees, bright sun, hour after low tide. Had been away for two weeks, as I spent the previous week visiting The Mouse with the family. First missed week on-site since June last year! So, what would the extra week's worth of tides bring in the way of flotsam?
This, and... well, not a lot more. This can was actually among the most interesting finds of the day. More on why down below. But as you can see by this shot...
...the beach was again a clean slate. The little wrack that did exist (mostly in Zone N) was old, dried reeds from 2011 still rolling around:
I've gone on for some months about the changes at Bay View over the past year. But with spring now "sprung," this image tell the story the best:
In an age of global sea-level rise and beach loss, the dunes at Bay View are actually advancing. 20 feet down the beach slope just in the past year! That can only happen if the energy of the sea lets it happen. A few bad waves, and you get this:
The energy coming in here is just weaker than it was a year ago. Waves aren't making it as high up the slope. And they're carrying far less detritus -- natural and manmade -- than before. The best logic behind this is that the seafloor is shifting. Sand bars have reared their heads at Bay View during very low tides. Natural buffers, absorbing the fury of the ocean -- and blocking seafloor debris. For how long? Don't know.

But for now, they cause this result. Zone N:
31 finds:
  • Building materials: 4 (asphalt)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 4 (3 foam scraps, 1 cup bottom)
  • Fishing misc.: 0
  • Food-related plastics: 3 (2 wrappers, 1 straw)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 2 (can, can scrap)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 6 (2 toys, tennisball, package scrap, 2 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 11
  • Paper/wood: 1 (paper scrap)
  • Misc./unique: 0
A few locally lost toys for my daughter's collection. A few scraps. A few thoughtless smokers. A rotted can...

Quickly over to Zone S:
9 finds:
  • Building materials: 0
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 2
  • Fishing misc.: 3 (fishing line, shotgun shell, shell wadding)
  • Food-related plastics: 1 (bottlecap)
  • Food-related metal/glass: 0
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 0
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 2
  • Paper/wood: 1 (bedpost finial)
  • Misc./unique: 0
A bedpost finial? Really?

So the game here has changed. But back to that aluminum can.
You've surely seen those enviromentalist site lists, showing how long things take to break down:
If you say "It takes 200 years for an aluminum can to break down!" and I can find one that's rotting away after ~6 months, you risk losing me for everything else you try to say. We all love round numbers; but we're a little more partial to our own eyes.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Collection Report Feb 29, 2012

Wednesday, February 29, 2012. 10:15 AM. Happy Leap Day! A gray, brisk morning, low tide, temps about 30 degrees F.
Look, a wrack line! A pathetic one, but more pronounced than most this winter. The latest high-tide was extremely weak though, barely pushing swash 1/3 of the way up the beach.

Still, the waves & winds managed to form a new range of cusps -- high grounds of sand with low troughs in-between, spaced evenly up and down the shoreline. And they dumped enough sand to bury some (much?) of what they brought in:
Well hello, little... scrap of bag?
Um, no, entire bag!
Just north of my zones, a washed-in lobster trap held half a dozen broken beer bottles from a recent party. More troubling is what happens to a trap as it slowly rots on the seafloor.
Tortured
When the vinyl scrapes against the bottom enough to expose the steel, the steel rusts & bubbles out. Eventually it splits and bursts the vinyl coating into tiny scraps. Each rusting lobster trap can spew off 1,000 or more little pieces of vinyl that then bounce colorfully along the sea bottom and likely into the food web. There are likely half a million -- or more -- rotting lobster traps at the bottom of the Gulf of Maine.

At any rate, the week had some excitement, though not for volume of debris. Zone N:
19 finds:
  • Building materials: 1 (brick)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 2
  • Fishing misc.: 2 (claw band, vinyl trap coating)
  • Food-related plastics: 0
  • Food-related glass/metal: 3 (1970s can scrap, 2 sea glass)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 6 (bag, rubberband, plastic cord, 1 scrap >1", 2 scraps <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 3
  • Paper/wood: 1
  • Misc./unique: 1 (fabric scrap)
Number-wise, nothing worth noting. But this guy is worth noting:
This pull-tab era aluminum top to a steel can is 30+ years old. It's the second such ancient piece of aluminum to wash into Bay View within a few weeks. If an offshore sandbar is shifting, revealing ancient debris, maybe it's blocking the transport of new debris at the same time. The junk is still out there. Maybe this humble scrap is a big clue as to why it's currently bypassing Bay View.

Anyway, on to Zone S:
14 finds:
  • Building materials: 2 (brick)
  • Foam/Styrofoam: 1
  • Fishing misc.: 2 (claw band, monofilament line)
  • Food-related plastics: 2 (sauce pack lid, fork/spoon scrap)
  • Food-related glass/metal: 2 (bottlecap, sea glass)
  • Nonfood/unknown plastics: 4 (bag, old comb, 1 scrap >1", 1 scrap <1")
  • Cigarette filters/plastics: 1
  • Paper/wood: 0
  • Misc./unique: 0
This poor thing is probably glad finally to be at rest:
I wonder if it had been buried under a sandbar for 30 years too?

Another week down. The numbers are as unimpressive as they've been most of the winter. But sometimes it's not about how much you find; it's about how much you can find out.

Friday, March 16, 2012

A Tale of Two Winters

From Dec 2010 - Feb 2011, I collected, on average 180 pieces of manmade debris at my beach, Bayview, in Saco, Maine each week.

From Dec 2011 - Feb 2012, that number was an average of 60 pieces each week!

Anyone following my Collection Reports has seen that the amount of debris I'm pulling off the beach has nosedived. It would be very tempting to see this as amazing news. I'd be tempted too, if not for all the research I'm now conducting simultaneously on a second beach further south.*
This, plus 153 individual scraps of fishing rope, came from my
second beach, Curtis Cove in Biddeford, for a total of 249
pieces of junk from 150 ft of shoreline. In one week in Feb.
No, the debris is still swirling in the Gulf of Maine, as fiercely as ever. But for some reason, starting in mid-November, it largely stopped washing up on Bayview beach.

Why?

There are two really intriguing possibilities. The first has to do with a strange phenomenon called internal waves. The ocean isn't one big homogenous lump of water. It is stratified -- often sharply -- with fresh, "light" layers on top and saltier, "dense" layers down below. When the stratification is strong, energy that gets put into the ocean (from storm or surface wind, etc.) can propagate along the boundaries between those layers. It's the cause of what's known as "dead water" -- when, say, a boat propellor that usually pushes the boat forward instead sends all its energy just into creating these underwater waves, and the boat hardly moves at all.

What does this have to do with beach debris? Well if the winter of 2010/11 was a time of high stratification between layers, more ocean energy may have traveled through these undersea conduits, churning up the seabottom and its debris. This huge wrackline from December 2010...
...may have gotten its beginnings from a churned-up seafloor thanks to shallow-water internal waves. Contrast that view with this winter's:
All winter long there has been almost zero seaborne wrack. No wrack = no plastic. Are the internal waves weaker this year, or even shut down? It's been an exceptionally mild winter in Maine. Freakishly mild. Does Saco Bay need bone-chilling air masses to stratify its waters in winter? We've also had fairly little rain or snow all winter long. Does the bay need fresh river runoff to stratify it?

I don't know. But it's one thought, and it's got some support from oceanographers I've spoken with.

The second thought comes from the few curious finds that have surfaced. Twice in the past month, I've pulled from the sands pulltab-era aluminum tops from old rusted-away steel cans.
2/29: Generic style used ~1970-1980
3/12: Coke can used only '71-'72
A third 30+ year-old pulltab aluminum top down in Curtis Cove makes 3 in a month! Which makes me wonder if an offshore sandbar has shifted, revealing 30-year-old flotsam and dampening the energy coming into Bayview. Just this week, at an ultralow low-tide, I snapped this muddy bar which peeked out of the water at the very edge of the tide line:
I've never seen anything like a sandbar exposed out at Bayview before. The ripples show that it's migrating landward. If it has bigger cousins just offshore, and they're steep enough to cut off inflow of seafloor debris, that may be what's stopping the debris from coming in.

As usual, I have more questions than answers. Clearly there's some energy at the beach. I've documented huge sandloads dumped up on the shore this winter, as well as several lobster traps. Yet the stuff that would get whipped up, suspended, and dragged in -- like vinyl, polystyrene, seaweed -- it's just not coming.

Whatever's keeping it from coming in, it's out there. And it will start washing into Bayview again. It's just a question of when. For the moment, it leaves me with the tantalizing question of "Why?"



* More specifics on this beach, Curtis Cove in Biddeford, in a future post, soon!