Predicting the Fate of Artefacts in Energetic, Shallow Marine Environments: an Approach to Site Management |
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Authors: | Jesse E. McNinch John T. Wells Arthur C. Trembanis |
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Affiliation: | VIMS, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, VA 23062, USA; CSHEL, Department of Geology, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA |
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Abstract: | A poor understanding of the physical environment often hinders management of marine artefacts. A study was conducted of an early-18th-century shipwreck to test whether the wreckage could have settled through ∼3.5 m of substrate. Results indicate that the wreck could have settled via episodic scour processes driven by storms and tidal inlet migration. A numerical model, modified to include characteristics of the underlying geology, predicts continued scour under moderate waves. Scour processes appear to have been interrupted by an erosion-resistant underlying layer, so that the wreck now remains exposed, subject to degradation. A generalized approach to predict burial or exposure of other shallow-water artefacts is developed. © 2006 The Authors |
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Keywords: | scour Queen Anne's Revenge wreck degradation tidal inlet sediment transport |
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