Why coasts are fractal?
The geometry of seacoasts are often used as an introductory archetype of fractal morphology in nature. See for instance
here.
To our knowledge, there are no models trying to explain why coasts are fractal, and how such fractal geometry is generated.
What is a fractal?
A fractal is a geometrical shape, or better a class of geometrical shapes.
They are quite widespread in nature, maybe more than triangles, squares, cubes or spheres.
Especially biological objects have fractal shapes, as for instance...
See
here for a brief tutorial on fractals and fractal dimensions.
Coastal systems
"The coast is simply where the land meets the sea." from
Coastal Systems by Simon K. Haslett (Routledge, Taylor and Francis, London 2000)
"As a matter of some urgency, researchers concerned with coastal evolution should consider the alternative models, even if there are few supporting data. The ideas of non-linear response, stochastic developement, deterministic chaos, catastrophism and criticality all deserve investigation."
(From
"Coastal Evolution. Late Quaternary shoreline morphodynamics" Ed. R.W.G.Carter and
C.D. Woodrffe Cambridge University Press 1994.)
A simple model of rocky coasts erosion
We propose a minimal model for the formation of rocky coast
morphology. This model bears on the reciprocal evolution of the erosion
power and the topography of the coast submitted to that erosion: The more
irregularly eroded the coast is, the weaker the average sea erosion power.
This retroaction leads to the spontaneous formation of a fractal seacoast.
The erosion of rocky coasts is the product of marine and
atmospheric causes. There exist many different erosion processes: wave
quarrying, abrasion, wetting and drying, frost shattering, thermal
expansion, salt water corrosion, carbonation, hydrolysis. A simplified
picture is used here by assuming that the different processes can be
separated into two categories: "rapid" mechanical erosion (namely wave
quarrying) and "slow" chemical weakening. The justification is that
mechanical erosion generally occurs rapidly, mainly during storms, after
rock has been altered and weakened by the slow weathering processes.
Modelling the sea
The sea, together with the coast, is considered to constitute a resonator.
It is assumed that there exists a given average power of the waves
P0.
The "force" acting on the unitary length of the coast is measured by the square
of the wave amplitude.
This wave amplitude is related to the input wave power, and their ratio is the quality factor
Q, which measure the damping: the smaller the quality factor, the stronger the damping of the
sea-waves.
There are several causes of sea-waves damping. Different loss
mechanisms occur independently.
The numerical and experimental studies of fractal acoustical cavities
have shown that the viscous damping increases roughly proportionally to the
perimeter of the cavity, leading to the idea that a mathematical fractal
cavity should be totally damped. Therefore, one can, in first
approximation, assume that the contribute to the quality factor
Q due to coast morphology is
is proportional to the inverse of the coast perimeter length
Lp(t) (it depends on time during the erosion process).
In other words, the sea is thought to exert an homogeneous
erosion force
f(t) on each coast element which decrease when the coast perimeter increase. The precise law is not so important, however we used:
where
f0 is a constant related to the initial value of
f(t=0) and
g is a parameter which measures the the importance of coast dissipation with respect to other mechanisms (e.g. bulk viscous damping).
Modelling the earth
The "resisting" earth is represented by a square lattice of linear size L
0.
A random number xi extracted from a flat probability distribution in the
interval [0,1], is assigned to each earth site i independently of the other
sites. This number is thought to represent the random lithology of the site
i. Each site then represents a small portion of the earth that may be
considered lithologically uniform. The erosion model must also take into
account that when a site is surrounded by the sea it is submitted to a
larger erosion and its resistance is relatively weakened as compared with a
coast site surrounded by earth or other coast sites.
To model this effect we impose the corresponding rule: a site has a resistance
to erosion ri given by ri = xi^niwhere ni is the number of first neighbors occupied by the
sea if ni is smaller than (z-1), z being the coordination number of the
lattice. If ni >= (z-1) then ri = 0. On a square lattice where z = 4 this
means that sites surrounded by three solid sites have a resistance ri = xi. If in contact with 2 sea sites the resistance is ri = xi^2. If the site
i is in contact with 3 or 4 sea sites, it has a zero resistance to erosion.
This is the way to introduce a link between the mechanical stability of a
site and its environment, sea or earth. An example is shown in Fig. 2. The
erosion rule itself, illustrated in Fig. 3, is simple. At time t, all coast
sites with ri <f(t) are eroded and Lp(t) and then f(t) are updated and the
earth sites which are in contact with the sea have their resistances
updated. One can see in the figure below that, from one step to the next some sites
have been eroded because they present a "weak lithology" while some "strong
lithology" sites are eroded due to their small mechanical stability. The
above rule then takes care of a decreased strength for sites which are
partially or totally surrounded by water. This mechanism reinforces the
mechanical stability of the coast in the sense that flat micro zones are
statistically helped to resist. On the opposite the existence of earth
filaments is eliminated.
Caption: How the sites resistances to erosion are linked to their lithology
and to their environment. A site with 3 or 4 sea neighbours have no
resistance. A site with lithology x
i with 2 earth neighbours has a
resistance r
i = x
i*x
i. A site with 3 earth neigbors has a resistance equal to
its lithology r
i = x
i. Left: lithology distribution x
i (bold numbers) and corresponding resistences r
i (tiny numbers). Right: After the corrosion action of the sea for an eroding power of 0.5.
"Rapid" erosive dynamics
We study iteratively
the time evolution of the morphology of the coast, of the eroding
''strength'' of the waves and of the progressive hardening of the coast by
successive elimination of the weakest parts by erosion. As the coast-line
length increases, the mechanical eroding force per unitary length
exerted by the sea is decreased
to a point where the coast is strong enough to resist further erosion.
 Start of the "rapid" mechanical erosion process.
| 
During the "rapid" mechanical erosion process.
| 
At the end of the "rapid" mechanical erosion process.
|
Caption: The erosion front keeps quite smooth at the beginning of the dynamics and
gets then progressively roughens. On
average, starting from a flat coast, L
p(t) increases with time and the sea
force becomes weaker. During the process, finite
clusters are detached from the "infinite" earth, i.e. islands are created
by the erosion process. Consequently, at any time, the total perimeter is
constituted by both the surface of islands and the surface of the
"infinite" earth , which will is the coast-line. This coast-line becomes
very irregular only towards the end of the dynamics.
Sea erosive strength
Caption: The erosive stregth of the sea decreases during the erosion process, due to the damping by the coastline geometry.
Fractal dimension
Caption: Box-counting measure of the fractal dimension for the final costal geometry, the straight line correspond to a fractal dimension of 4/3.
Coast width
Caption: Power law scaling of the average coastal width as a function of the parameter
g (gradient).
Universality and percolation
The model belongs to the universality class of Gradient Percolation, for what concern the fractal dimension of the final geometry of the coastline and the exponents characterizing the scaling properties of the quantities with respect to the gradient parameter
g.
Gradient Percolation
Caption: A representation of the gradient percolation model.
Conclusions
In summary, this work has presented a minimal model for rocky
coast formation which bears on the reciprocal evolution of the erosion power and the
topography of the coast submitted to that erosion: The more irregular the
coast, the weaker the sea-waves and the sea erosion power. This retroaction
leads to the spontaneous formation of a fractal sea-coast with a fractal
dimension D
f = 4/3. The fractal geometry plays the role of a morphological
attractor. This means that whatever its initial shape, a rocky shore will
end fractal if submitted to such a type of erosion, forgetting its initial
morphology. At the same time, all the weak components of the sea-shore are
eroded, determining a complex hardening of the remaining shore. This model
reproduces at least qualitatively some of the fundamental features of real
coasts using only simple ingredients.
Some pictures and nice animations
-
- http://www.lactamme.polytechnique.fr/Mosaic/images/COT2.N5.3.M.D/display.html
-
- http://www.lactamme.polytechnique.fr/Mosaic/images/COT2.N6.3.M.D/display.html
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- http://www.lactamme.polytechnique.fr/Mosaic/images/COT2.J3.3.M.D/display.html
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- http://www.lactamme.polytechnique.fr/Mosaic/images/COT2.J4.3.M.D/display.html
Further readings
- Bird, Eric C. F. Coasts, (Van Nostrand Rheinhold Co., New York, 1984).
- Bird Eric C. F. and Schwartz M. L. (eds), The World Coastline (Van Nostrand Rheinhold Co., New York, 1985).
- Mandelbrot B. B., How long is the coast of Britain? Statistical self-similarity and fractional dimension, Science, 155, 636 (1967)
- Mandelbrot B. B., The Fractal Geometry of Nature (Freeman, New York, 1982).
- De Vriend, H.J., Capobianco, M., Chesher, T., De Swart, H.E., Latteux, B. and Stive, M.J.F., Long-term modeling of coastal morphology, Coastal Engineering, 31, n. 1-3, pp 225-269 (1993).
- Sapoval B., Haeberlé O., and Russ S., Acoustical properties of irregular and fractal cavities, J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 102, 2014-2019 (1997).
- Hébert B., Sapoval B., and Russ S., Experimental study of a fractal acoustic cavity, J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 105, 1567 (1999).
- Sapoval B., Fractals (Aditech, Paris, 1989)
- Shore protection manual (Coastal Engineering Research Center, Department of the Army Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, Mississippi, vol 2, ch. 6, 7, 1984)
- Davis, R.A., Jr, 1986, Oceanography - An Introduction to the Marine Environment, Wm C Brown Publ., 432 pp.
- Stauffer D. and Aharony A., Introduction to Percolation Theory (Taylor & Francis, London, 1991).
- Balasz L., Corrosion front roughening in two-dimensional pitting of aluminum thin layers, Phys. Rev. E 54, 1183-1189 (1996).
- Sapoval B., Santra S. B., and Barboux Ph., Fractal interfaces in the self-stabilized etching of random systems, Europhys. Lett., 41, 297-302 (1998).
- Gabrielli A., Baldassari A., and Sapoval B., Surface Hardening and Self-Organized Fractality Through Etching of Random Solids, Phys. Rev. E 62, 3103, (2000).
- K. J. Falconer, Fractal Geometry: Mathematical Foundations and Applications (J. Wiley, New York, 1990).
- Grossman T. and Aharony A., Accessible external perimeters of percolation clusters, J. Phys. A, 20, L1193-L1201 (1987).
- J. Feder, Fractals, (Plenum Press, New York, 1988).
- B. Sapoval, M. Rosso and J. F. Gouyet, The fractal nature of a diffusion front and relation to percolation, J. Phys. Lett. (Paris), 46, L149-156 (1985).
- Gabrielli A., Munoz M. A., and Sapoval B., Field theory of self-organized fractal etching, Phys. Rev. E, 64, 016108-1,-8, (2001).
Links
- The Coastline Extractor http://rimmer.ngdc.noaa.gov/coast/getcoast.html
- Fractal Erosion http://www.forester.net/ecm_0205_fractal.html
- Jean-Francois Colonna http://www.lactamme.polytechnique.fr/
- Barton C., http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/barton/web
- Greve C. http://www.usyd.edu.au/su/marine/lect/imsb/greve-l11.html
- Barton C., http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/barton/pubs/fractalmap.pdf
- Barton C., http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/barton/pubs/coastal.pdf
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TWikiGuest - 10 Feb 2003