Características dinámicas de ensenadas estructurales de Chile central: Maitencillo-Cachagua y Papudo, Región de Valparaíso

Authors

  • María Victoria Soto Bäuerle Universidad de Chile
  • Joselyn Arriagada González Universidad de Chile

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-34022007000200006

Keywords:

Headland bay beach, wavy attack condition, wave-dominated beach types

Abstract

The morphology of the coastline controlled by the tectonics and the morfoestructura has formed the irregular coast, with two small headland bay beaches. The variables that were analyzed - like relative position of the coast, refractive index, angle of curvature, type of beach dominated by waves and coastal forms - reflect the existence of two different coastal geographic units. The presence of two relatively contiguous but different beaches as far as its coastal form results in significant dynamic differences among them and to the interior of the same one. Maitencillo-Cachagua is transverse and intermediate beach, specifically transverse bar and beach, with the wavy high dynamics, that is translated in a strong condition of seasonal erosion of the beach and cliff; dynamic differences and wavy attack between the proximal, media and distal zone exist. Papudo is an oblique coast, clearly reflecting and in where the wavy energy presents a dynamics of low impact in the forms of the beach. Great seasonal and space differences in the dynamics of the dynamic patterns of the surge in the headland bay beach do not appear

Author Biographies

María Victoria Soto Bäuerle, Universidad de Chile

Departamento de Geografía, Universidad de Chile (Chile). 

Joselyn Arriagada González, Universidad de Chile

Departamento de Geografía, Universidad de Chile (Chile). 

Published

2007-12-30

How to Cite

Soto Bäuerle, M. V. ., & Arriagada González, J. . (2007). Características dinámicas de ensenadas estructurales de Chile central: Maitencillo-Cachagua y Papudo, Región de Valparaíso. Revista De Geografía Norte Grande, (38), 99–112. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-34022007000200006

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Section

Artículos