TY - JOUR
T1 - Foredune-ridge development along an urban pocket beach, Montrose Dunes Natural Area, southwestern Lake Michigan
AU - Mattheus, C. R.
N1 - The author thanks the following individuals at the Illinois State Geological Survey for their help with data collection, management, and processing: Liz Spitzer, Kristen Pearce, Liane Rosario, and Mitchell Barklage. Special thanks go out to Steven E. Brown, ISGS Chief Scientist, for his unwavering support and enthusiasm for ISGS work along Lake Michigan. ISGS monitoring efforts at Montrose Beach were facilitated by an Illinois Department of Natural Resources\u2019 Coastal Management Program (IDNR-CMP) cooperative agreement (Fund Title IDNR CMPNU11). The writing of this paper was also promoted by an Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant-funded (IISG) effort to link offshore sand-distribution and routing patterns to beach geomorphic behaviors along Chicago (Fund Title F0008309702085). Gratitude is extended to the following IDNR-CMP and IISG individuals, in no particular order, for helping the ISGS Coastal Research Team connect the science to coastal stakeholder groups: Cody Eskew, Tara Jagadeesh, Casey Sebetto, Kim Kreiling, Vidya Balasubramanyam, Meg Kelly, Carolyn Foley, and Thomas Hook.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - While foredune geomorphology has been studied along many Great Lakes coastlines, little attention has been given to the development and evolution of foredune ridges along engineered ‘pocket’ beaches, which are common along many urban lakefronts of the region. This paper reports on the recent morphodynamics of Montrose Beach, the largest of Chicago's engineered coastal embayments, with emphasis on its ‘Dunes Natural Area.’ A post-2020 period of beach recovery occurred after 2013–2020 lake-level rise of >1.5 m, which was accompanied by shoreline recession and overwash-induced backshore accretion. The influx of sand into the urban embayment during this time facilitated post-2020 beach recovery with lake-level fall. This phase of beach expansion was marked by the formation of three distinct, parallel berm lines that have become vegetated and functioned as focal points for eolian accretion. Undisturbed by grooming and other beach-management activities, the Dunes Natural Area continues to be influenced by lake-level changes and storms. Vegetative establishment and eolian sand trapping, upon disconnect from active reworking along the shoreline, have increased the expression of linear topographic highs. Seasonal ridgelines along natural beach environments, including barrier spits, tend to undergo reworking prior to such stabilization. Insights from Montrose Beach provide coastal managers with up-to-date information on important geomorphic developments at Chicago's most popular beach destination, whose Dunes Natural Area provides habitat for the endangered Great Lakes piping plover. Understanding its geomorphic trajectory can help inform coastal resiliency planning, here and elsewhere, to protect valuable ecosystems and infrastructure within the urban coastal landscape.
AB - While foredune geomorphology has been studied along many Great Lakes coastlines, little attention has been given to the development and evolution of foredune ridges along engineered ‘pocket’ beaches, which are common along many urban lakefronts of the region. This paper reports on the recent morphodynamics of Montrose Beach, the largest of Chicago's engineered coastal embayments, with emphasis on its ‘Dunes Natural Area.’ A post-2020 period of beach recovery occurred after 2013–2020 lake-level rise of >1.5 m, which was accompanied by shoreline recession and overwash-induced backshore accretion. The influx of sand into the urban embayment during this time facilitated post-2020 beach recovery with lake-level fall. This phase of beach expansion was marked by the formation of three distinct, parallel berm lines that have become vegetated and functioned as focal points for eolian accretion. Undisturbed by grooming and other beach-management activities, the Dunes Natural Area continues to be influenced by lake-level changes and storms. Vegetative establishment and eolian sand trapping, upon disconnect from active reworking along the shoreline, have increased the expression of linear topographic highs. Seasonal ridgelines along natural beach environments, including barrier spits, tend to undergo reworking prior to such stabilization. Insights from Montrose Beach provide coastal managers with up-to-date information on important geomorphic developments at Chicago's most popular beach destination, whose Dunes Natural Area provides habitat for the endangered Great Lakes piping plover. Understanding its geomorphic trajectory can help inform coastal resiliency planning, here and elsewhere, to protect valuable ecosystems and infrastructure within the urban coastal landscape.
KW - Dune ridge
KW - Eolian
KW - Littoral sand trapping
KW - Overwash accretion
KW - Sand supply
KW - Urban beach management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205354866&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85205354866&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jglr.2024.102449
DO - 10.1016/j.jglr.2024.102449
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205354866
SN - 0380-1330
JO - Journal of Great Lakes Research
JF - Journal of Great Lakes Research
M1 - 102449
ER -