It’s that time of year again, the summer season is upon us, and this year has really has brought the heat! With much of the country sweltering in the late 20s and early 30s lately, it’s made us appreciate the … Continue reading →
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 20 January 2012 entitled, "Brighton Beach".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 17 January 2014 entitled, "Brighton Beach".
Signs indicating the way to Pines Beach and Kairaki Beach, visible out the window of the Student Volunteer Army's bus.
Beach ridge stratigraphy can provide an important record of both sustained coastal progradation and responses to events such as extreme storms, as well as evidence of earthquake induced sediment pulses. This study is a stratigraphic investigation of the late Holocene mixed sand gravel (MSG) beach ridge plain on the Canterbury coast, New Zealand. The subsurface was imaged along a 370 m shore-normal transect using 100 and 200 MHz ground penetrating radar (GPR) antennae, and cored to sample sediment textures. Results show that, seaward of a back-barrier lagoon, the Pegasus Bay beach ridge plain prograded almost uniformly, under conditions of relatively stable sea level. Nearshore sediment supply appears to have created a sustained sediment surplus, perhaps as a result of post-seismic sediment pulses, resulting in a flat, morphologically featureless beach ridge plain. Evidence of a high magnitude storm provides an exception, with an estimated event return period in excess of 100 years. Evidence from the GPR sequence combined with modern process observations from MSG beaches indicates that a paleo storm initially created a washover fan into the back-barrier lagoon, with a large amount of sediment simultaneously moved off the beach face into the nearshore. This erosion event resulted in a topographic depression still evident today. In the subsequent recovery period, sediment was reworked by swash onto the beach as a sequence of berm deposit laminations, creating an elevated beach ridge that also has a modern-day topographic signature. As sediment supply returned to normal, and under conditions of falling sea level, a beach ridge progradation sequence accumulated seaward of the storm feature out to the modern-day beach as a large flat, uniform progradation plain. This study highlights the importance of extreme storm events and earthquake pulses on MSG coastlines in triggering high volume beach ridge formation during the subsequent recovery period.
A photograph of volunteers creating a beach garden in New Brighton.
A photograph of volunteers at a beach garden in New Brighton.
A photograph of a beach garden in New Brighton.
A photograph of a beach garden in New Brighton.
A photograph of a truck delivering soil for a beach garden in New Brighton.
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An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 3 December 2011 entitled, "Back to the Beach".
On an empty beach near Sumner, a young boy and his Irish Spaniel stand at the shoreline as the photographer captures the moment. Further down the beach, beneath the original formation of Clifton Sp…
Cave Rock on Sumner Beach.
Erosion scarp along North New Brighton Beach.
Erosion scarp along North New Brighton Beach.
Erosion scarp along North New Brighton Beach.
Erosion scarp along North New Brighton Beach.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Driver power: Hawarden Garage and Transport driver Ted McNabb pitches in to ferry members of the Student Volunteer Army for earthquake relief between Kairaki Beach, Pines Beach and Kaiapoi".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Hood Ave, Pines Beach".
People walk on Sumner Beach near Cave Rock.
A walkway down to the beach at Sumner.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Road works at Pines Beach".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Road works at Pines Beach".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Road works at Pines Beach".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Road works at Pines Beach".
A van partially submerged in liquefaction. The photographer comments, "A van that unluckily drove into a hole caused by the terrible liquefaction on Beach Road, North New Brighton during the Christchurch earthquake".
A map showing the swimming water quality at Christchurch beaches.
Jarg Pettinga, Geological Science, photographed on the beach at Sumner.
A PDF copy of pages 308-309 of the book Christchurch: The Transitional City Pt IV. The pages document the transitional project 'Beach Garden'. Photos with permission from Greening the Rubble