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Simulating surface soil moisture on sandy beaches

Hallin, Caroline LU ; IJzendoorn, Christa van ; Homberger, Jan Markus and de Vries, Sierd (2023) In Coastal Engineering 185.
Abstract

A model that simulates surface moisture content on sandy beaches for aeolian transport applications is developed and integrated into the aeolian transport model AeoLiS. The moisture content of a thin surface layer (≈2 mm thickness) is computed as a function of wave runup, precipitation, evaporation, percolation, and capillary rise from the groundwater table. The groundwater table is simulated using a modified Boussinesq equation accounting for the overheight due to wave runup. The surface moisture due to capillary rise is simulated with an experimentally determined soil water retention (SWR) curve of the “van Genuchten” type. Hysteresis is accounted for by differentiating between SWR curves for drying and wetting conditions. The model... (More)

A model that simulates surface moisture content on sandy beaches for aeolian transport applications is developed and integrated into the aeolian transport model AeoLiS. The moisture content of a thin surface layer (≈2 mm thickness) is computed as a function of wave runup, precipitation, evaporation, percolation, and capillary rise from the groundwater table. The groundwater table is simulated using a modified Boussinesq equation accounting for the overheight due to wave runup. The surface moisture due to capillary rise is simulated with an experimentally determined soil water retention (SWR) curve of the “van Genuchten” type. Hysteresis is accounted for by differentiating between SWR curves for drying and wetting conditions. The model is tested against a data set of 221 point observations of surface moisture from Noordwijk beach in the Netherlands. The measured surface moisture within the study area displays large spatial and temporal variability. The model results display an expected cross-shore gradient of moisture content, but also a large scatter when compared to the data. The scatter may partly be explained by local variability of hydraulic properties that are not accounted for within the model. Despite the scatter, the proposed surface moisture model is a starting point to integrate the transport limiting effect of surface moisture into meso-scale aeolian transport models. To facilitate model setup and the use of this surface moisture model, the soil water retention data from 10 beaches with variable grain size characteristics are provided in this study. Future studies may focus on additional model validation against data sets with variable meteorological conditions and simultaneous moisture and aeolian transport observations.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Aeolian transport, Beach groundwater, Soil moisture, Soil water retention
in
Coastal Engineering
volume
185
article number
104376
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85167419626
ISSN
0378-3839
DOI
10.1016/j.coastaleng.2023.104376
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
68ddc5cc-5f18-4efc-b294-c457b61790af
date added to LUP
2023-10-24 15:49:16
date last changed
2023-11-07 15:42:31
@article{68ddc5cc-5f18-4efc-b294-c457b61790af,
  abstract     = {{<p>A model that simulates surface moisture content on sandy beaches for aeolian transport applications is developed and integrated into the aeolian transport model AeoLiS. The moisture content of a thin surface layer (≈2 mm thickness) is computed as a function of wave runup, precipitation, evaporation, percolation, and capillary rise from the groundwater table. The groundwater table is simulated using a modified Boussinesq equation accounting for the overheight due to wave runup. The surface moisture due to capillary rise is simulated with an experimentally determined soil water retention (SWR) curve of the “van Genuchten” type. Hysteresis is accounted for by differentiating between SWR curves for drying and wetting conditions. The model is tested against a data set of 221 point observations of surface moisture from Noordwijk beach in the Netherlands. The measured surface moisture within the study area displays large spatial and temporal variability. The model results display an expected cross-shore gradient of moisture content, but also a large scatter when compared to the data. The scatter may partly be explained by local variability of hydraulic properties that are not accounted for within the model. Despite the scatter, the proposed surface moisture model is a starting point to integrate the transport limiting effect of surface moisture into meso-scale aeolian transport models. To facilitate model setup and the use of this surface moisture model, the soil water retention data from 10 beaches with variable grain size characteristics are provided in this study. Future studies may focus on additional model validation against data sets with variable meteorological conditions and simultaneous moisture and aeolian transport observations.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hallin, Caroline and IJzendoorn, Christa van and Homberger, Jan Markus and de Vries, Sierd}},
  issn         = {{0378-3839}},
  keywords     = {{Aeolian transport; Beach groundwater; Soil moisture; Soil water retention}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Coastal Engineering}},
  title        = {{Simulating surface soil moisture on sandy beaches}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.coastaleng.2023.104376}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.coastaleng.2023.104376}},
  volume       = {{185}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}