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Featured researches published by Luminiţa Preoteasa.


Journal of Coastal Research | 2014

Alongshore variations in beach-dune system response to major storm events on the Danube Delta coast

Florin Tătui; Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa

ABSTRACT Tătui, F., Vespremeanu-Stroe, A, Preoteasa, L., 2014. Alongshore variations in beach-dune system response to major storm events on the Danube Delta coast. In: Green, A.N. and Cooper, J.A.G. (eds.), Proceedings 13th International Coastal Symposium (Durban, South Africa), Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue No. 70, pp. 693–699, ISSN 0749-0208. Deltaic beach-dune systems are extremely dynamic, responding to processes operating on scales from short-term variations related to storm and floods to long-term evolution driven by large-scale sediment dynamics (including lobe switching). On Danube Delta beaches, coastal storms and associated processes lead to a wide range of morphological impacts from moderate deposition to significant erosion. Coastal processes develop with marked temporal differences as a result of variations in storminess related to changes in climatic systems (North Atlantic Oscillation). In order to assess the variations in vulnerability to extreme storms, different sectors along the study site were examined using two storm impact indexes: Storm Impact Categories of Sallenger, 2000 and Dune Stability Factor of Armaroli et al., 2012, based on specific storm thresholds. There is a very good correspondence between the effects of the December 1997 – January 1998 extreme storm cluster and the vulnerability of the beach-dune system predicted with both indicators, with significant alongshore variations of storm impact. The driving factors imposing this variability at different time scales are also discussed, ranging from nearshore slope (which imposes different wave heights and storm induced water level increase) and sediment availability (in direct connection with the evolution of different deltaic lobes, position into the littoral cell and the distance to the Sf. Gheorghe arm mouth, river discharge variability and human interventions) to beach-dune morphology (accommodation space and pre-existing coastal morphology).


Archive | 2015

Morphology and the Cyclic Evolution of Danube Delta Spits

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa

This chapter is about the sand spits formation in relation with the evolution and morphology of the Danube mouths and deltaic lobes, developed within the general framework of the virtually tideless Black Sea basin in a medium-wave energy environment. It deals with both barrier spits and islands, in respect to their processual development as most of the Danube delta spits derive from former barrier islands. The morphodynamics of the modern spit barriers associated to Danube mouths is discussed in relation with human induced fluvial discharge decline and long-term storminess variability. Regarding the Danube delta evolution, based on the morphology, internal structure and revised chronologies, the authors argue for the first time that all open-coast deltaic lobes had or have an evolution marked by the cyclic development of sandy barrier spits and islands in front of their downdrift units.


Archive | 2016

The correlated behavior of sandbars and foredunes on a nontidal coast (Danube Delta, Romania)

Florin Tătui; Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa

ABSTRACT Tătui, F., Vespremeanu-Stroe, A. and Preoteasa, L., 2013. The correlated behavior of sandbars and foredunes on a nontidal coast (Danube Delta, Romania) Coastal foredunes, shoreline and nearshore sandbars compose one large-scale interactive morphological system. Although the variability of these coastal features and their connection to environmental factors have been the focus of many analyses, the direct interactions between them are yet poorly identified, especially for natural nontidal coasts. This paper presents the preliminary results regarding the correlated behavior of the foredunes, shoreline and sandbars in a multi-bar, low-lying deltaic coastal zone, based on six years of seasonal bathymetric and topographic surveys. The analysis shows that, at the multiannual scale, there is a good correlation between the morphometric parameters (volumes and widths) and behaviour (spatial and temporal) of sandbars and foredunes, especially along the accumulative and stable sectors of the study area. Good correlation of these sectors is expressed by the fact that the two entities are interdependent and they present similar variability. The weak correlation identified along the erosive sector is probably due to the significantly lower variability of the foredunes when compared to that of the sandbars. This could reflect the strong influence of the Sf. Gheorghe mouth bar and the pattern of sediment availability, wave climate and longshore sediment transport characteristics along the three sectors of the study area with different shoreline dynamics.


Archive | 2017

The Evolution of Danube Delta After Black Sea Reconnection to World Ocean

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa; Florin Zăinescu; Florin Tătui

This chapter presents synthetically the latest progresses made on Danube Delta evolution based on new cores, sedimentological and morphological analyses which together with the newly obtained absolute ages (AMS 14C and OSL) shed a new light upon the delta formation in both its evolutionary phases (chronology) and the growth patterns. It is the first proposed reconstruction of the fluvial delta which succeeds to date delta front advancement (Old Danube lobe: 8/7.5–5.5 ka) into Danube Bay and the formation of the initial spit. Contrary to the former views, for the first time, it is proven that the early stage of delta plain formation preceded with more than a millennium both the inception of the initial spit and the relative stabilization of the sea level. Moreover, the fluvial delta morphology is reinterpreted to show that most of the present landscape is the recent result of fluvial aggradations which followed after the initial topography (former delta plain) was drowned through the concurrent action of subsidence and sea level rise. With regard to the maritime delta, we bring new arguments into the debate concerning the southern delta (composed by lagoons and sandy barriers built by longshore circulation versus deltaic lobes construction and reworking) which demonstrate that a southern distributary (Dunavăţ, derived from Sf. Gheorghe) had an intense activity and formed open-coast lobes during 2.6–1.3 ka. Moreover, the evolution of each of the six open-coast lobes belonging to maritime delta is systematically presented in relation with Danube flow changes with a focus on their chronology, progradation rates and spatial extension. New evidences have been also produced to document the changes induced by the solid discharge reduction on the Danube since the mid-twentieth century, which recently fostered the shifting of the active lobes from asymmetric to deflected (Sf. Gheorghe) or from fluvial dominated to wave influenced (Chilia).


Archive | 2017

Foredunes Dynamics on the Danube Delta Coast

Luminiţa Preoteasa; Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe

This chapter is devoted to the foredunes developed on the dry temperate Danube delta coast with a focus on the Sf. Gheorghe beach (Sărăturile ridge plain) at the updrift of the Sf. Gheorghe mouth. It presents the medium term (e.g. 17 years) beach–foredune dynamics and foredune morphology together with the alongshore variability pattern as influenced by dune superposition over three different shoreline modal states: erosive, stable, and accretionary. The morphology of the foredunes (from different coastal sectors) is briefly described, highlighting the imprints of the site-specific characteristics of the controlling factors (e.g., shoreline dynamics, beach width, vegetation cover, nearshore configuration) on foredunes shape, size, and behavior. The role of extreme events (e.g., severe storms and Danube floods) and fair weather conditions is discussed along with the geomorphological evolution of the beach–foredune system derived from seasonal topographic surveys and cartographical data analyses.


GEOREVIEW: Scientific Annals of Stefan cel Mare University of Suceava. Geography Series | 2014

The evolution of Sf. Gheorghe (Danube) asymmetric deltaic lobe

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa; Florin Tătui; Alida Timar-Gabor; Ionela Cârdan

The wave asymmetric Sf. Gheorghe lobe is the only active in the Danube delta where river mouth bar (and the associated barrier islands and spits) continuously deployed a cyclic development for almost two millennia. During first stage, the Sf. Gheorghe distributary had a small discharge (with an order of magnitude lower than present) which after that experienced a rapid increase in consequence of the successive avulsions of Impuţita (southern distributary of Sulina arm) and Dunavăţ distributaries. Our morphological analyses together with the newly obtained chronology, revealed the multiple ridgesets structure of Sf. Gheorghe deltaic lobe. In fact, all ridgesets (10) follow a common morphodynamic pattern characterized by the cyclic succession of three stages: i) subaqueous mouth bar development, ii) barrier island emergence, iii) barrier spit phase with several secondary spits derived from an updrift trunk ridge. The size of each ridgeset increased exponentially with every new cycle due to the constant lengthening of the coastline as the downdrift side of the lobe advances seaward through a series of progressively larger similar quadrilaterals, yielding to a constant enlargment of the delta front size.


Geomorphology | 2007

Beach-dune interactions on the dry-temperate Danube delta coast

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa


Quaternary International | 2013

The impact of the Late Holocene coastal changes on the rise and decay of the ancient city of Histria (southern Danube delta)

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa; Diana Hanganu; Anthony G. Brown; Iulian Bîrzescu; Phillip Toms; Alida Timar-Gabor


Geomorphology | 2016

The evolution of an asymmetric deltaic lobe (Sf. Gheorghe, Danube) in association with cyclic development of the river-mouth bar: Long-term pattern and present adaptations to human-induced sediment depletion

Luminiţa Preoteasa; Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Florin Tătui; Florin Zăinescu; Alida Timar-Gabor; Ionela Cîrdan


Quaternary International | 2016

Formation of Danube delta beach ridge plains and signatures in morphology

Alfred Vespremeanu-Stroe; Luminiţa Preoteasa; Florin Zăinescu; Sabin Rotaru; Liliana Croitoru; Alida Timar-Gabor

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Alida Timar-Gabor

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Natalia Piotrowska

Silesian University of Technology

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