barrier islands
Post on 04-Jan-2016
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Barrier Islandslong, narrow
deposits of sand that form parallel to the shore and away from surf action
Found all over the world, but are most well known along the entire eastern coast of North America
ChangesFrom Florida northward to Maine, they
change dramatically in character. Usually separated from the mainland by a
lagoon, bay, or sound.
Weather Although they are hot spots for vacationing and development, because of their geological past these islands are also susceptible to radical changes, especially from intense weather systems, such as hurricanes and nor’easters that run up the coast.
Debate Over FormationThe formation of barrier islands is a much
debated subject in geology. One theory is that the islands were formed about 18,000 years ago as the ice ages ended. As sea level began to rise, it flooded areas behind beach ridges; the rising water also carried the sediments from the beach, depositing it just off the coast. Ocean currents and waves, along with sediment from
nearby rivers and streams, continued to bring in sediment, all of which helped to build up the islands.
ChangingContinually changing as the powerful
forces of winds, ocean currents, waves, storms and tides reshape them.
Tides have the greatest impact on the evolution of the barrier islands.
Georgia CoastlineThe eastern coastline of
Georgia is the western end of a massive ocean funnel.
Thus tides here rise higher (6'-8') and faster than anywhere else on the seaboard.
Tybee IslandFarthest north of Georgia’s barrier islands Approximately 4 miles long and 1 mile wide Built by sands brought in by the Savannah
RiverTybee = an Indian word meaning salt.Georgia’s most developed barrier island
Little Tybee Island Once privately
ownedApproximately 3
½ miles of beach with a total acreage of 6,505 acres
The only access to the island is by private boat and as yet there is no development.
Williamson IslandKnown as Georgia’s newest island,
Williamson Island was first detected around 1971
Formed by the growth of a sand bar or detached spit off the south end of Little Tybee and the sand is thought to have come from the erosion of Tybee.
Current length is approximately 2 miles.Named for Mr. Jimmy Williamson, a
former Mayor of Darien, Georgia.
Wassaw Island7-mile-long island The most primitive and undeveloped of
Georgia’s barrier islands. In 1866, a New England cotton merchant,
George Parson, purchased the island for $2,500.
Later, Parson’s descendants sold it to the Nature Conservancy with the understanding that no bridge would ever be built to it from the mainland.
Research on population levels and habits of loggerhead turtles
Ossabaw Island10 miles long and 2
miles wide with an area of 25,000 total acres
9 ½ miles of beachesRich in history and
was once a favorite hunting and fishing ground of the Indians.
Skeletal remains of Indians dating back 4,000 years have been found there.
St. Catherine’s Island23-square-mile island
with a total acreage of 14,640 acres and 11 miles of natural beaches.
Once the capital of the Guale Indian Nation, St. Catherines was also the site of Santa Catalina de Guale, the first Spanish mission in coastal Georgia (1566).
Blackbeard IslandTotal acreage including marsh is 5,618 acres. 2 ½
miles wide at its widest pointIn the early 1700’s Edward Teach, the famous English
pirate popularly known as “Blackbeard,” was thought to have buried treasure here.
In 1800, Blackbeard Island was purchased by the U. S. Navy Department at public auction as a source of live oak lumber for shipbuilding.
From August 14, 1880 to 1910, the island served as a quarantine station where ships left passengers that were thought to have yellow fever.
In 1924, became a preserve and breeding ground for native birds
Sapelo Island12 miles long and 2 – 4
miles wide with a total area of 17,950 acres
4th largest of Georgia's barrier islands.
Most extensive undisturbed natural beach dunes of any of Georgia’s barrier islands.
Wolf IslandLocated just south of
Sapelo at the mouth of the Altamaha River.
5,126 acres, of which 3 ½ miles of beach line the ocean side of the island.
Access to the island is by boat
Nesting grounds of the terns, shorebirds, wading birds, migratory waterfowl and loggerhead turtles.
Little St. Simons IslandLast family-owned island on Georgia’s coast. One of its most famous owners was Pierce
Butler and his wife Fanny Kemble, who grew rice there during Georgia’s plantation days.
Sea IslandConnected by causeway
to St. Simons Island Privately owned beach
resort with hotels and private cottages and residences.
First-class resort -- The Cloister Hotel
Because of its private ownership, there is no public access to the beach from the mainland.
St. Simons IslandOnly one of Georgia’s larger barrier
islands that has never been privately owned.
Consists of 27,300 total acres including the marsh.
First inhabited by the Creek Indians and then by the Spanish, British, and
finally by southern plantation owners who grew sea island cotton and live oak timber.Lighthouse -- one of the nation's oldest continuously working lighthouses.
Jekyll IslandSmallest of Georgia’s major barrier
islands10 miles long and 1 ½ miles wide at its
widest pointfirst used as hunting and fishing grounds
by the Creek Indians who called the island “Ospo.”
Little Cumberland IslandOwned by a private homeowners
association. 2 ½ miles of beach and 2,400 total acres.
Cumberland IslandSouthernmost and longest of Georgia’s barrier
islands. Including the marsh, it has a total acreage of
23,000 acres, 15,000 of which are uplands. Once inhabited by a Florida tribe of the
Timucuan Indians who called the island Missoe which means sassafras.
Island was renamed San Pedro by the Spanish who settled, set up a mission and occupied the island for more than a century.
Named Cumberland in 1734 by Chief Tomochichi in honor of his friend William Augustus, Duke of
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