Mike Morris

Mike Morris

About the Author by Frank Cataldo

"When you're curious, you find lots of interesting things to do."~ Walt Disney
When Mike Morris was just a boy his dad instilled in him a curiosity of the world around him. His dad not only taught him about the natural world, its creatures & its cycles, but also the aspects of things mechanical. This curiosity grew into a diversity of interests and a career that has touched the fields of Biomedical Science, Marine Biology, Healthcare Management, BMW race cars, Alternative Automotive Energy Technologies and more relative to Plum Island, Oceanography, Climate Change & Sea Level Rise.
Mike's interest in Oceanography is rooted in the sport of surfing, a lifelong passion since the age of 11. He was described by author Andrea Fox in a North Shore Magazine feature article on Plum Island Erosion, as a "Wave Enthusiast". The sport has lured Mike to surf spots around the globe. He's surfed breaks not only here in New England, but also on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, Puerto Rico, the British Virgin Islands, Hawaii and also the Pacific coasts of Mexico & Costa Rica.
Planning a successful surf vacation, whether it is a few days in New England or a week somewhere more exotic, requires successful surf forecasting. To this end Mike studied Physics, Meteorology and Oceanography while pursuing a degree in Biology and a MS in Public Health & Business from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. With the advent of the internet & the declassification of Military wave forecasting models in 1996, the task of accurately forecasting surf became much easier and more accurate. Today, wave propagation models can predict the arrival of a distant swell within a 6 hour window of time. Mike has studied these models daily over the last 17 years relating meteorology to surface winds & then wave generation and propagation. The ultimate verification of a model's forecasting ability was to see the swell "light up" offshore weather buoys, and ultimately arrive at the beach with the size & period forecasted. Mike Currently provides Surf Forecasting services through his company Northeast WaveWatch.com for northernsurfer.com & PlumIslandSurfco.com. Mike is also actively involved in sea-level rise planning & adaptation for local communities.
So why did Mike complete a study on Plum Island Beach erosion? Mike and his wife Jen Wright own a home on Plum Island. In 2006, Jen was elected to the position of selectman for the town of Newbury. During her term, beach erosion at Plum Island had accelerated and became a great concern. Understanding Mike's knowledge of oceanography, she asked him to attend some of the early meetings about the problem and make sense of the science. What became apparent was that there were many theories, very little science, and a plan in the works to solve a problem that no one had taken the time to unravel & understand.
Realizing that it's impossible to solve an ill defined problem, Mike set off with camera in hand, photographing the beach, its dunes, the rock groin structures and the Merrimack River mouth. His curiosity motivated him to understand what was happening along the shore. To observe and quantify changes along the Plum Island shore, he also researched historical nautical charts dating from present day back to the pre-revolutionary war era. He analyzed some 90 years of Massachusetts CZM shoreline change data as well as 15 years of satellite imagery.

He charted the changes Plum Island had undergone and related these changes to events in Plum Island history. To better understand the forces (wave energy) driving Plum Island's sand migration, Mike sifted through some 7000 hours of actual wave buoy data where he discovered that wave direction during Northeast storms changes as the storm evolves, and so isn't always only from the Northeast. In fact, the most powerful waves impacting Plum Island's shore almost always originate from far offshore, to the east and southeast - it was a fact that Mike a (scientific) surfer already knew. The study became rather involved and rather large very quickly. In total Mike devoted some 300 hours to this work and some one hundred visits to the Plum Island shore during 2008. To this day, Mike can't help but observe which way the sand is moving along the beach on any given day.

Mike presented the results of his work in a Power Point presentation to members of the Army Corp of Engineers at Congressman John Tierney’s Office in June of 2008 where it was well received. In the same month he also made a presentation to the Newbury Beach Committee who felt that every resident of Plum Island should view this information. Through the summer of 2008 Mike refined his presentation & gathered more photographic data. In September he presented his study to the Town of Newbury where after he received a standing ovation. Impressed with his work & message, The Massachusetts Audubon Society had Mike make an encore presentation in October. Since then Mike has devoted his efforts to making this information more widely available to the Public through the development of this website and further presentations to interested groups. The Town of Salisbury enlisted his expertise in evaluating their shore line as well and aired his presentation on Salisbury Cable TV during the summer of 2010. Segments of Mike's Presentation, "Unlocking the Mystery of Beach Erosion at Plum Island" can be viewed on this website. "In a Nutshell “as it is called, zeros in on the key issues facing Plum Island.

Tuesday, 05 March 2013 01:57

Shoreward Migrating Sandbars

Shoreward Migrating Sandbars(Scroll down for Power Point Slides)

With the river delta bar & its sand supply now far offshore, sand migration back to shore via wave action, is slow & protracted. In the process of migrating back to shore, sandbars alter the angle at which waves approach the beach. This has resulted in erosion hotspots at various points along the shore.

In recent history, as Jetty Breaches have allowed sand to spill from the ocean shores into the river, this sand ultimately washed out to the delta bar at the river entrance. Here, wave action drove some of that sand south, growing a long sand bar, offshore of Plum Island. While Wave action expanded the bar to the south, it concurrently also drove it towards shore. As a consequence of this process, the southern tip of this bar refracted incoming wave energy, creating erosion hotspots on the beach. These Hotspots mirrored & traveled with the tip of this southerly expanding sandbar. For example, we've observed an erosion hotspot near the area of Mad Martha's around the year 2000. As the offshore bar expanded southward, this erosion hotspot also migrated south - to the center groin by 2004.

With a narrower overall shore, Plum Island's beach groins became uncovered. As this traveling erosion hotspot interacted with the now exposed center groin, we experienced extreme instances of beach erosion there. Currently this migrating bar is close to shore near Plum Island Center, providing protection from offshore waves & passing sand to the that shore, which was recovering in early 2013. The tip of this sandbar however, now lies south of the center, refracting wave energy there. Hence, the erosion hotspot moved further south once again, to the area between the Center Groin & Harvard Way. This sequence of events happened previously in the early & mid 1970's.

Offshore Sandbars Near Plum Island Center

SandBar Panorama North of Center 4 22 10

"Shoreward Migrating Sandbars"

Viewing Instructions: Click lower right corner to expand viewing size.  Click to advance slides & animations

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Tuesday, 05 March 2013 01:55

The River Jetty System

(Scroll down for Power Point Slides)

Without question, the single most effective action to be taken to stave the erosion problem at both Salisbury & Plum Island beaches is to repair the landward end of both River Mouth Jetties where wave action has tumbled the granite stones into the river. To best prepare both shores for future sea level rise, a redesign of these structures also needs to be considered. To understand this position, let’s examine the function of the River Jetties. 

When the Jetties were 1st constructed, shallow sandbars and shipping were primary concerns. Much like attaching a nozzle to a garden hose, the objective was to narrow the width of the river channel thereby increasing river current velocity. This increase in flow was to scour the river bed of sand keeping the channel deep for shipping purposes. However, the river bed never remained deep enough, as coastal processes kept refilling the channel with sand. Hence the Jetties were extended in length a number of times to prolong the duration of increased current velocity, driving that "nuisance sand" out to sea, and to keep sand from spilling into the channel from the shores of the barrier islands. The net effect of Jetty construction however, was that the river delta bar & its sand supply, which was once near shore & fused with area beaches, was relocated far off shore. As a side effect, the South Jetty began to act like a giant beach groin collecting sand along its south side widening & increasing the height of Plum Island. Ultimately, nature prevailed, the channel never remained shallow enough & a dredging program was implemented. 

Though they were built as navigation structures, we see that the River Jetties actually serve a second function that directly impacts neighboring shores – gathering sand on the beach side & keeping it out of the river channel. So, relative to the barrier islands they also behave as what are known as Terminal Groins. As Terminal Groins, the Jetties bracket both shores, halting sand migration into the river, thereby keeping portions of the beaches near the river mouth stable. When low spots (or wave induced breaches) do form in the Jetties close to shore, nature’s cycles quickly resume and wave action efficiently passes sand from both the Plum Island & Salisbury beaches into the river. The result is a narrowing of the shoreline. Today, the most significant low spot or breach in the Jetty lies close to shore on Plum Island where it dictates a new high water mark, narrowing the overall shore, encroaching upon existing homes. Sand can only build up (widening the shore) to the point of the Jetty breach. Any wider and wave action simply passes the sand through the breach into the river- ultimately expanding Plum Island Point. This isn't just a storm wave event, but a 24 hour a day sand migration that is part of a spit building process that nature seeks to continue. Plum Island Point is a continuously expanding Sand Spit that the Jetty (when it's intact) serves to interrupt.  

Looking back into history, when the South Jetty was first constructed on Plum Island, this spit building process quickly stacked sand up behind the Jetty along the ocean facing shore increasing both the width & height of the barrier island - all the way back to the National Wildlife Refuge. The effect is much like a highway accident where cars driving north encounter an incident & then, as they collect, traffic backs up far to the south. This newly formed piece of real estate promptly filled with houses - where water once was. Now their existence is tied to the integrity of the South Jetty. When the Jetty fails, coastal processes drive sand back into the river, the shore narrows & houses are in jeopardy.

 "The River Jetty System"

Viewing Instructions: Click lower right corner to expand viewing size.  Click to advance slides & animations

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 "The South Jetty Breach"

Viewing Instructions: Click lower right corner to expand viewing size.  Click to advance slides & animations

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Tuesday, 05 March 2013 01:54

The Problem…In a Nutshell

The 5 Major Causes of Beach Erosion at Plum Island

(Scroll down for Power Point Slides)

In 2008, 5 interrelated causes of beach erosion were identified at Plum Island. These causes interact with one another and are:

1)A near shore breach in the Merrimack River South Jetty (& North Jetty in Salisbury) that passes sand from the ocean facing shore into the river, narrowing the overall shore.

2)A River Jetty System that forces a once near shore sand supply offshore, away from the beaches, helping to create #3…

3)Shoreward migrating sandbars that alter wave energy & direction thereby accelerating sand migration along the beaches, creating erosion hot spots.

4)The center groin which, when uncovered, blocks sand migration to the north (and interacts with #3 to create an erosion hotspot)

5)A barrier dune system compromised by real-estate development.

Without question, the single most effective action to be taken to stave the erosion problem at both Salisbury & Plum Island beaches is to repair the landward end of both River Mouth Jetties where wave action has tumbled the granite stones into the river. To best prepare both shores for future sea level rise, a redesign of these structures also needs to be considered. To understand this position, let’s examine the function of the River Jetties. 

When the Jetties were 1st constructed, shallow sandbars and shipping were primary concerns. Much like attaching a nozzle to a garden hose, the objective was to narrow the width of the river channel thereby increasing river current velocity. This increase in flow was to scour the river bed of sand keeping the channel deep for shipping purposes. However, the river bed never remained deep enough, as coastal processes kept refilling the channel with sand. Hence the Jetties were extended in length a number of times to prolong the duration of increased current velocity, driving that "nuisance sand" out to sea, and to keep sand from spilling into the channel from the shores of the barrier islands. The net effect of Jetty construction however, was that the river delta bar & its sand supply, which was once near shore & fused with area beaches, was relocated far off shore. As a side effect, the South Jetty began to act like a giant beach groin collecting sand along its south side widening & increasing the height of Plum Island. Ultimately, nature prevailed, the channel never remained shallow enough & a dredging program was implemented. 

Though they were built as navigation structures, we see that the River Jetties actually serve a second function that directly impacts neighboring shores – gathering sand on the beach side & keeping it out of the river channel. So, relative to the barrier islands they also behave as what are known as Terminal Groins. As Terminal Groins, the Jetties bracket both shores, halting sand migration into the river, thereby keeping portions of the beaches near the river mouth stable. When low spots (or wave induced breaches) do form in the Jetties close to shore, nature’s cycles quickly resume and wave action efficiently passes sand from both the Plum Island & Salisbury beaches into the river. The result is a narrowing of the shoreline with the exposure of the rock groin structures on Plum Island. (These exposed groins can themselves create episodes of erosion on their down drift sides.) Today, the most significant low spot or breach in the (south) Jetty lies close to shore on Plum Island. The breach dictates a new high water mark that narrows the overall shore & encroaches upon existing homes. Sand can only build up (widening the shore) to the point of the Jetty breach. Any wider and wave action simply passes the sand through the breach into the river- ultimately expanding Plum Island Point.This isn't just a storm wave event, but a 24 hour a day sand migration that is part of a spit building process that nature seeks to continue. Plum Island Point is a continuously expanding Sand Spit that the Jetty (when it's intact) serves to interrupt.  

Looking back into history, when the South Jetty was first constructed on Plum Island, this spit building process quickly stacked sand up behind the Jetty along the ocean facing shore increasing both the width & height of the barrier island - all the way back to the National Wildlife Refuge. The effect is much like a highway accident where cars driving north encounter an incident & then, as they collect, traffic backs up far to the south. This newly formed piece of real estate promptly filled with houses - where water once was. Now their existence is tied to the integrity of the South Jetty. When the Jetty fails, coastal processes drive sand back into the river, the shore narrows & houses are in jeopardy.

To compound matters further, with the river delta bar & its sand supply now far offshore, sand migration back to shore via wave action, is slow & protracted. Also, in the process of migrating back to shore, sandbars are created that alter the angle at which waves approach the beach. This has resulted in erosion hotspots at various points along the shore. In recent history, as Jetty Breaches have allowed sand to spill from the ocean shores into the river, this sand ultimately washed to the delta bar at the river entrance. Here, wave action drove some of that sand south, growing a long sand bar, offshore of Plum Island. While Wave action expanded the bar to the south, it concurrently also drove it towards shore. As a consequence of this process, the southern tip of this bar refracted incoming wave energy, creating erosion hotspots on the beach. These Hotspots mirrored & traveled with the southern tip of this southerly expanding sandbar. For example, we’ve observed an erosion hotspot near the area of Mad Martha’s (around the year 2000), migrate south to the center groin by 2004. With a narrower overall shore, Plum Island’s beach groins became uncovered. As this traveling erosion hotspot interacted with the previously covered center groin for example, we experienced extreme instances of beach erosion there. Currently this migrating bar is near the center, providing protection from offshore waves & passing sand to the Center whose shore is finally recovering. The southern tip of this sandbar now lies south of the center, refracting wave energy there. Hence the erosion hotspot moved further south again, to the area between the Center Groin & Harvard Way. 

Ideally we should calculate an ideal beach width, redesign & shorten the Jetty System such that the delta bar relocates closer to shore, fuses with the barrier islands and establishes a more constant sand feed. It is important to note that some sand will still need to pass from the ocean beach of Plum Island, to Plum Island Point in the river, else that shore will severely erode as it has in the past following Jetty repair & an aggressive river dredging campaign.

Though Beach nourishment activities can buy homeowners time, they are at this juncture, temporary, very short term, & expensive solutions. The situation is analogous to filling a bucket of water to the rim, but the bucket has a hole in its side (the Jetty Breach). No matter how much water is added (& in the case of Plum Island & Salisbury beaches it is sand) one can never keep the bucket full.

In the effort to stave erosion, the cart here, has been placed before the horse. Until this failed infrastructure is altered, one can’t expect any type of sand, be it fine or coarse, dredged or driven ashore by waves naturally, to hang around for very long. To solve this problem one needs to fix the infrastructure first, be it through repair, or better yet, re-design, and then employ beach nourishment & conservation activities. Until then, we are simply pouring taxpayer dollars into the sea. Make no mistake, climate change & sea level rise are a reality & at some point many barrier islands will lose this battle. But right now it is this navigation structure that is impacting us to a greater degree. To best face climate change & sea level rise, it's important that we understand the coastal processes at Plum Island, design a proper river mouth that best stabilizes the nearby shores and requires a minimal amount of maintenance, be it dredging or otherwise.

Mike Morris

The 5 Major Causes of Beach Erosion at Plum Island

Viewing Instructions: Click lower right corner to expand viewing size.  Click to advance slides & animations

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Tuesday, 05 March 2013 01:51

Plum Island, Massachusetts

Plum Island is an 8 mile long, narrow, sandy Barrier Island off the northern coast of Massachusetts. The Island is divided among 4 townships: Newburyport, Newbury, Rowley and Ipswich.  While the southern two thirds of the island have been set aside for the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, the Northern third which borders the Merrimack River is densely populated and developed. It is this area that is currently, and has historically been, subject to episodes of beach erosion. 

In our efforts to stabilize a river entrance and occupy a migrating & fragile dune system, we have fought natures processes with little understanding and respect of them. Consequently we’ve disrupted sand migration & are the cause of the erosion we are fighting. Today we have a clearer understanding of the processes at work on our shore. If we choose to work with them, we can solve this problem, or continue our 100 year fight against them.

Review the information on this site. Understand what nature is doing, and decide whether we are actually solving the problem of erosion at Plum Island. 

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