This Florida Geological Survey (FGS) study was funded by the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). This study characterizes recently sampled sediments from
the beaches of Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Bay, Gulf, Franklin, Wakulla, Taylor, Dixie,
Citrus, Hernando, Levy, and Pasco Counties as well as the extreme northern beaches of Pinellas County.
A total of 703 samples, 653 samples from 240 sites along the northwest coast of Florida and 50 samples
from 39 sites in Florida’s Big Bend were collected, described and photographed. Selected samples from
each location were granulometrically analyzed. Photographs, descriptions and the results of
granulometric analyses are provided.
The study area on the northwest coast of Florida was comprised of the beaches of Escambia, Santa Rosa,
Okaloosa, Walton, Bay, and Franklin Counties. The study area in Florida’s Big Bend was comprised of the
beaches of Wakulla, Taylor, Dixie, Citrus, Hernando, Levy, Pasco and northern Pinellas Counties. These
study areas were broken down into 12 and 7 reaches, respectively. On the northwest coast of Florida,
where the beaches are more continuous, these reaches are defined by geographic boundaries such as inlets
and passes as well as the mouths of rivers, harbors, and bays. The study often showed a correlation
between these boundaries and changes in grain size. Progressing eastward along the northwest coast of
Florida, as the Big Bend is approached; beaches are occasionally bounded by stretches of coastline where
beaches are absent due to coastal erosion. Progressing into the Big Bend and southward through the
region, beaches become uncommon. Those beaches that are present are bounded by tidal marshes. Moving
further southward across the Big Bend, the barrier island complex of the southwest coast of Florida was
reached and beaches again typify the coast.
The trend from west to east along the northwest coast of Florida shows a general
eastward decline in mean grain size to Cape St. George. From Cape St. George eastward, there is an
increase in mean grain size to the beginning of the Big Bend east of Franklin County.
Changes in grain size, define three regions in the northwest coast of Florida:
(1) The first region is defined by the area bounded by sample locations ES-01 and BY-15. This region
extends from Perdido Key to just west of the mouth of St. Andrews Bay. In this region, the mean grain
size curve generally declines eastward. The curve peaks on Perdido Key, in western Escambia County, on
Santa Rosa Island, in eastern Escambia County, and on the mainland beaches of western Bay County.
(2) The second region is defined by the area bounded by sample locations BY-16 and FK-15. This region
extends from just west of the mouth of St. Andrews Bay to Cape St. George on Little St. George Island.
The mean grain size in this region averages lower than that in the regions to either side.
(3) The third region is defined by the area bounded by sample locations FK-16, on the east side of
Cape St. George, and FK-65, at the mouth of Ochlocknee Bay. Mean grain size generally increases
eastward across this region. This region shows the largest variances of mean grain size evidenced
in any of the three regions.
As the beaches of Florida’s Big Bend are highly discontinuous, regions based on
changes in mean grain size alone could not be defined. Three regions in Florida’s Big Bend were
identified within the study area: (1) the beaches of Wakulla County, which owe their existence to
being proximal to sand sources on the northwest coast of Florida, (2) beaches in Levy and Dixie
Counties, related to the ancestral Suwannee River and relic dunes and (3) the beaches of Pasco
County and extreme northern Pinellas County that are more properly considered to be the northern
most extension of the barrier island complex of the southwest coast of Florida. All of these
beaches are more or less in a natural state. In contrast, the remaining beaches in the Big Bend,
lying in Taylor, Dixie, Citrus, Hernando and mainland Pasco Counties, are geographically limited,
narrow and frequently man-made.
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