KĀHALA AREA DESCRIPTION
The Kāhala shoreline study
area (transects 250 - 346) is located on the southern coast of Oʻahu at the western end of Maunalua
Bay and is bounded by WaiÔalae Stream to the east and
by Black Point to the west. Much of the shoreline is lined with seawalls. Waves
are typically small (< 1 ft) along all portions of
this shoreline. A shallow fringing reef shelters the shoreline from southern
hemisphere swells and tradewind swells, which
commonly affect this side of the island.
The eastern one-quarter of Kāhala
Beach (transects 250 - 275) is approximately stable to accreting with rates up
to 0.9 ft/yr (around
transect 261). The remainder of Kāhala Beach is
eroding. The western half of Kāhala Beach
(transects 304 - 346) was mostly lost to erosion between 1975 and 1996; except
for small pockets of sand around transects 318-319, 328-330, 332-334, 338-341,
and 345-346. For areas where the beach has been lost, rates are calculated up
to and including the first shoreline with no beach (1996) and show the speed at
which the beach disappeared.
Hwang (1981) found stable shorelines or net accretion along
most of the Kāhala shoreline from 1949 - 1975.
Sea Engineering (1988) found accretion near the east end of Kāhala
Beach and erosion or stable shorelines along the rest of Kāhala
from 1975-1988. These studies used the vegetation line as a shoreline proxy
and, therefore, found little or no change when the vegetation line was fixed with
a seawall.
For more information see: http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/asp/coasts/oahu/index.asp
1 Hwang, D. (1981) "Beach changes on Oʻahu
as revealed by aerial photographs", State of Hawaii, Department of
Planning and Economic Development.
2 Sea Engineering, Inc. (1988) ÒOʻahu
shoreline studyÓ, City and County of Honolulu, Department of Land Utilization.
Keywords:
Oʻahu; Kāhala
Beach; Maunalua
Bay; WaiÔalae Stream; Black Point