The coastal geomorphology of the Jervis Bay area
Abstract
The typically embayed coastline of south-eastern Australia results from the partial innundation of subaerially developed topography by the last postglacial marine transgression, and the variable Quaternary modification of the initial estuaries, bays and bights by the progradation of sandy barrier systems of marine and aeolian origin and by fluviatile sedimentation behind them (e.g., Thom 1965; Bird 1963 and 1967b; Langford-Smith and Thom 1967). Jervis Bay is one of the largest and most symmetrical of these coastal inlets.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description