Beach Nourishment Glossary

Disclaimer

The definitions stated above are intended to provide a lay reader with a general understanding of various terms associated with the Town of Nags Head’s beach nourishment project. The terms defined may have additional technical legal definitions or issues associated with them.

Terms

  1. A - I
  2. J - R
  3. S - Z

Accretion

Historically, accretion was the gradual addition of sand to a parcel of oceanfront property through the natural action of the Atlantic Ocean. Today, accretion typically also encompasses the historical terms reliction and avulsion. A reliction is the expansion of an oceanfront parcel of property due to a portion of the property which was previously covered by water becoming dry when the water recedes. An avulsion is a rapid addition of sand to a parcel of oceanfront property through natural processes or through human driven forces such as a beach nourishment project.

Accretions of sand generally belong to the oceanfront property owner. However, under North Carolina law, the title to any addition to the portion of the ocean beach seaward of the mean high water mark which is caused by a publicly funded beach nourishment project vests in the State of North Carolina.

Beach Nourishment

The placement of sand on the beach or dunes by human driven means. Typically, sand is provided through the use of mechanical or hydraulic dredging of material from a borrow site which is pumped to the site of the beach nourishment and distributed upon the beach by mechanical equipment.

Beach Renourishment

Beach nourishment occurring upon an area of the beach which has already been the subject of an initial beach nourishment project.

Benthic Monitoring

The monitoring of organisms that live on the sub-aquatic bottom. The Town is required to perform benthic monitoring as part of its beach nourishment project permit. The information obtained from benthic monitoring is often considered to be a suitable indicator of stresses on the marine environment and can act as an early warning system of potential issues with a beach nourishment project. Benthic monitoring can also be used to show the rate of recovery of the marine environment following a beach nourishment project.

Borrow Site

The site from which sand is obtained for placement on the beach during a beach nourishment project. Typically, a borrow site is chosen because of the amount of sand available and the consistency of the sand with the natural sand existing upon the beach to be nourished. A borrow site may be located on land, in the sound or in the Atlantic Ocean. The Town’s borrow site is located 2 to 3 miles offshore from Nags Head in the Atlantic Ocean.

View a diagram (PDF) showing the offshore borrow area that will be used for Nags Head's beach nourishment project.

Cross-Shore Transport

A wave and/or tide generated movement of sand toward or away from the shoreline.

Dredging

The removal of sediment or the excavation of tidal or subtidal bottom materials to provide sufficient depths for navigation or anchorage, or to obtain material for construction or for beach nourishment.

Dry Sand Beach

Historically, the area of the ocean beach which was actually dry at the time it was being viewed. Legally, the term dry sand beach is often defined as the portion of the ocean beach that is landward of the mean high water mark. The dry sand beach may be privately owned, but it remains subject to public trust rights.

Dune

Any hill, mound, or ridge of sand on the coast whether created by natural or artificial forces.

Easement

A right of use over the property of another. With regard to beach nourishment, a property owner will grant an easement to the Town for the limited and specific use of a portion of the owner's property during the beach nourishment project. The limited and specific use will allow the Town to place sand on the owner's property to provide a consistent beach contour, to allow the Town to maintain the dunes created, and to allow the Town access to the property to inspect, maintain and repair the nourished beach area.

View the final easement (PDF) for Nags Head's beach nourishment project.

Equilibration

Equilibration is the process by which a mechanically built beach restores to its natural profile.

Erosion

Generally, the wearing away of land by the action of natural forces whether the result of gradual or rapid (avulsive) processes, such as wave action, tidal currents, littoral currents, wind, or storm events. If through erosion any area of land moves below the mean high water mark, the oceanfront property owner no longer has title to that area and title becomes vested in the State of North Carolina.

Erosion Escarpment

A vertical drop in the beach profile caused from high tide or storm tide erosion.

Frontal Dune

The first dune located landward of the ocean beach. The NC. Division of Coastal Management defines this dune as the first dune having sufficient vegetation, height, continuity and configuration to offer protective value. The toe of the frontal dune is the seaward extent of the frontal dune and it begins where the contour of the dune rises up from the landward extent of the ocean beach creating a distinct change in slope or elevation. Where an erosion escarpment exists on the seaward edge of a frontal dune, there will often be no visible toe of the dune and the erosion escarpment will represent the seaward extent of the frontal dune.

First Line of Stable Natural Vegetation

Looking landward, the first point on the oceanfront where natural vegetation is present. When a first line of stable natural vegetation exists on a parcel of property, it is a natural indicator of the boundary between the dry sand portion of the ocean beach and upland property. In areas where there is no visible stable natural vegetation present, this line is often established by connecting or extending the lines from the nearest adjacent first lines of stable natural vegetation existing on either side of the site.

Hydraulic Sand Placement

The transportation of sand using water and centrifugal pumps mounted on a barge or large seagoing vessel (hydraulic dredging), from one site to another for placement of the sand on the second site. In the case of the Town’s beach nourishment project, hydraulic sand placement will be used to move sand from the borrow site to the land where beach nourishment is occurring.