Carolina Environmental Diversity Explorations

Evidence of rising sea level · By Dirk Frankenberg

Subtidal Seafloor

Figure 8. This marsh is being eroded by rising sea level. (Photograph by the author. More about the photograph)

Salt marshes do well in irregularly flooded areas, but rising sea level continuously converts these areas into regularly flooded habitats and then into a new seafloor. Some marsh plants, especially smooth cordgrass, can tolerate the first of these conversions, but none of them can survive the second.

Recently eroded marsh soils and the new subtidal seafloor that it forms are seen in Figure 8. Note particularly the muddy cliff that lies between the surface of the water and the marsh. This cliff, like those behind the beaches on the barrier islands, are telltale signs of recent erosion. If the erosion had taken place some time in the past, the cliff would have been converted to a slope. The fact that it has not been is evidence that erosion, the main architect of cliffs in sedimentary settings, has been at work quite recently.

If you are ever in the market for waterfront property, avoid lots with cliffed shorelines! In that direction lies continuously shrinking lot size or expensive and unsightly protection structures.

Definitions

marsh n.
A low-lying wet land usually between land and water consists of mostly grassy vegetation. [more]
subtidal adj.
Pertaining to shallow coastal areas below the low tide mark.
barrier island n.
A long, relatively narrow island running parallel to the mainland, built up by the action of waves and currents and serving to protect the coast from erosion by surf and tidal surges.
sedimentary adj.
Of or relating to rocks formed by the deposition of sediment. [more]