COASTAL WORKS 245
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reached by water which had dropped nearly all its silt
slsewhere.
The filling of an estuary or lake may be aided by silt-
jetties being built up by rivers, which deposit their silt as a
bank in the stagnant water on each side of their entrance.
Banks thus formed are slowly raised above the water-level
as silt-jetties. The delta of the Mississippi with its finger-
like projections has been thus extended into the Gulf of
Mexico. Silt-jetties subdivide where a river Dbifurcates
against an obstacle, and the junction of adjacent jetties
breaks up an estuary into separate lakes; the river twists
and winds between these lakes, though separated from them
perhaps only by a narrow swampy bank. The Norfolk
Broads are typical examples of this formation. They were
originally part of an estuary, which has been silted up owing
to the narrowing of its mouth by the Yarmouth spit, and
divided by confluent silt-jetties into shallow lakes. The
horders extend inward and the lake is reduced to a small
round pool; and its disappearance completes the conversion
of the estuary into an alluvial plain.
CoasTAL ProTECcTION BY PLANTING AND GROYNES—
Strong masonry has been often used as defence against the
sea. It however may be undercut and out-flanked, and its
fall provides ammunition by which the waves more effectively
hatter the coast. William Smith! the Father of Geology,
was sent in 1801 to the Norfolk coast to devise means for its
protection ; he carefully observed wave action and condemned
masonry as dangerous; he recommended ‘embankments
as like as possible” and of the same materials as those
thrown up by the sea. They by their looseness disarm the
waves, and provide permanent and cheap defence. Sand
dunes are effective protection but they may be blown away
by the wind. Their migration can be stopped by such
olants as Marram grass, Psamma arenaria. Its long under-
ground stems and roots form a firm mat and the spikes of
grass stop the movement of sand grains on the surface. A
growth of Marram grass converts a moving into a fixed dune.
It may thereby defend a coast from the sea, and save a
fertile plain from being overridden by sand dunes from an
adjacent desert.
-J. Phillips, Memoir Wm. Smith, 1844, pp. 50-3.