Abstract:
The southeastern coastline of Sri Lanka experiences active sediment transport through
longshore drift and wave-induced currents however, these natural processes are
increasingly disrupted by human interventions such as harbour construction and
breakwaters. This study investigates grain size characteristics to differentiate natural
hydrodynamic influences from anthropogenic impacts, focusing on the Oluvil Harbour
and associated coastal structures. Forty sediment samples were collected from
Adalachchenai, near the Gal Oya River mouth up to Ninthavur covering a 5 km long
beach stripe representing mean sea level and berm zone. Grain size analysis was
conducted using mechanical sieving and the results were processed with GRADISTAT
v9.1 software. Statistical parameters (mean size, sorting, skewness, and kurtosis) were
calculated to assess sediment distribution patterns. Field observations indicate that the
Oluvil Harbour and its breakwaters disrupt natural longshore sediment transport,
resulting in localized erosion and sediment accumulation. The GSD results revealed that
the grain sizes of the collected sediments ranged from 354.19 μm (fine sand) to 625.09
μm (coarse sand), reflecting varying energy regimes, while sorting values (0.86–1.12)
indicate moderate to poor sorting influenced by wave action, fluvial input, and
anthropogenic disturbances. The skewness values (-0.009 to -0.13) suggest a dominance
of coarser particles, and kurtosis values (0.99–1.08) indicate transitional depositional
conditions. Adalachchenai exhibits a wave-dominated environment, the Gal Oya River
mouth shows fluvial-marine interactions, and Nintavur represents a low-energy setting.
These findings emphasize the need for integrated coastal management to balance natural
processes and human activities, aiding sustainable coastal management in Sri Lanka and
similar regions. Implementing measures such as beach nourishment, sediment bypassing,
and adaptive shoreline protection can help mitigate the adverse effects of human
interventions.