TY - JOUR
T1 - Nearshore ice-complex morphodynamics within an urban embayment, Southwestern Lake Michigan
T2 - Insights from a winter 2021–2022 monitoring study
AU - Mattheus, C. R.
AU - Theuerkauf, Ethan J
N1 - This study was funded by a Michigan State University (MSU) subaward, extended to the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) as part of NSF Award 1950101 . Additional support was provided through the Illinois Department of Natural Resources \u2019 Coastal Management Program (IDNR- CMP ), long-term partner on all Illinois-centric geological monitoring activities the ISGS is involved in. The primary author wishes to acknowledge Ania Bayers, Cody Eskew, and Casey Sebetto for helping to connect our research group with various Illinois coastal stakeholder groups. Gratitude is extended to Liz Spitzer and Kristen Pearce, ISGS technicians, for their help with surveying and data management. We would like to express our sincerest appreciation for Steven E. Brown, ISGS Chief Scientist, for his unwavering support and enthusiasm for our work along Lake Michigan.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Process-based insights into ice-shoreline morphodynamics are generally lacking, yet are critical for modeling and managing cold climate coastlines. In this study, conducted during the winter of 2021–2022 at an engineered Lake Michigan pocket beach, we address this knowledge gap by integrating repeat footage from beach cameras, aerial photographs acquired during sub-weekly drone flights, weather station information, and precision pre- and post-ice topo-bathymetric survey data to document and categorize the geomorphic evolution of a nearshore-ice complex under varying meteorologic and hydrodynamic conditions. While ice-complex formation and collapse were largely temperature-driven, episodes of sudden expansion followed multi-day wave events, with nearshore wave heights >1.5 m. These conditions promoted the accumulation and integration of brash ice and slush ice, brought in from elsewhere, along the ice front. Rapid nearshore ice-complex (re)expansion, following active erosion of the ice front during the high-energy wave events, was promoted by the calmer marine states to follow, during subzero temperature conditions. The cumulative impacts of shore ice on the lake bottom were captured in pre- and post-ice survey datasets. Up to ∼0.5 m of elevation loss occurred across the nearshore zone of ice advance and retreat, given wave scour along the ice front. Sand losses were roughly balanced by accretion of the lakeward part of the urban embayment. This study offers valuable insights into cross-shore dynamics obscured along more open sections of coast by complex littoral dynamics. Better understanding of ice-shoreline morphodynamics has implications for coastal resiliency planning for anticipated climate change.
AB - Process-based insights into ice-shoreline morphodynamics are generally lacking, yet are critical for modeling and managing cold climate coastlines. In this study, conducted during the winter of 2021–2022 at an engineered Lake Michigan pocket beach, we address this knowledge gap by integrating repeat footage from beach cameras, aerial photographs acquired during sub-weekly drone flights, weather station information, and precision pre- and post-ice topo-bathymetric survey data to document and categorize the geomorphic evolution of a nearshore-ice complex under varying meteorologic and hydrodynamic conditions. While ice-complex formation and collapse were largely temperature-driven, episodes of sudden expansion followed multi-day wave events, with nearshore wave heights >1.5 m. These conditions promoted the accumulation and integration of brash ice and slush ice, brought in from elsewhere, along the ice front. Rapid nearshore ice-complex (re)expansion, following active erosion of the ice front during the high-energy wave events, was promoted by the calmer marine states to follow, during subzero temperature conditions. The cumulative impacts of shore ice on the lake bottom were captured in pre- and post-ice survey datasets. Up to ∼0.5 m of elevation loss occurred across the nearshore zone of ice advance and retreat, given wave scour along the ice front. Sand losses were roughly balanced by accretion of the lakeward part of the urban embayment. This study offers valuable insights into cross-shore dynamics obscured along more open sections of coast by complex littoral dynamics. Better understanding of ice-shoreline morphodynamics has implications for coastal resiliency planning for anticipated climate change.
KW - GIS
KW - Lakebed scour
KW - Shore ice
KW - Small uncrewed aircraft systems
KW - Urban beach
KW - Winter storm
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jglr.2024.102503
DO - 10.1016/j.jglr.2024.102503
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85214229509
SN - 0380-1330
JO - Journal of Great Lakes Research
JF - Journal of Great Lakes Research
M1 - 102503
ER -