66. Island Beach State Park Island Beach State Park is the last remaining stretch of undeveloped
barrier island on the central New Jersey coast. The park extends from
the shore community of Seaside Park southward for just over seven miles
to Barnegat Inlet, a stabilized inlet to Barnegat Bay (Figure 174). To
get to Island Beach, take the Garden State Parkway to Toms River (Exit
82A) and follow Route 37 east across the causeway to Seaside Heights.
Follow Route 35 south until it dead ends at the park entrance. A daily
use fee is required to enter the park.
The barrier island was purchased in 1926 by Henry C. Phipps, a Pittsburgh
steel magnate and partner of Andrew Carnegie. His intentions were to build
an elaborate resort and beach community. However, the 1929 stock market
crash and Mr. Phipps' death in 1931 prevented this scheme. The barrier
island remained undeveloped property of his estate until New Jersey purchased
the land to establish Island Beach State Park in 1953. The park opened
to the public in 1959. The park serves as stark reminder of what the natural
shore looked like before development, and serves as an outdoor classroom
for processes associated with barrier islands along the Jersey Shore. The park is subdivided into three zones. The Northern Natural Area is
a wildlife preserve next to Seaside Park. It encompasses the area shoreward
of the beach to the lagoon, and consists of sand dunes, saltwater marshes,
freshwater bogs, and a maritime shrub forest community. Public access
to this northern section is limited to beach walking and ocean fishing.
Self-guided and ranger-led nature walks through the back beach area begin
at the Aeolim Nature Center located a about mile south of the park entrance.
The central portion of the park includes two large developed bathing recreational
beaches. The Southern Natural Area comprises both the inlet area and a
wildlife refuge. There is limited parking and access to the beach. The
southern section of the beach is open to beach buggies for fishing by
permit. Several small gravel roads lead to a very narrow beach on the
bay side of the island. This area is accessible for nature study and hiking
only. Be aware that poison ivy and ticks are a threat any time of year.
In season, mosquitos can be ferocious in the back beach area, and lightning
is always a serious threat to consider. A short walk from the Atlantic Ocean beach to Barnegat Bay provides an
opportunity to examine all the natural features associated with a barrier
island. Compared to area beaches farther north, this beach consists of
a nearly pure white quartz sand with only a trace of other minerals. The
sand is similar in consistency to the sands exposed in the New Jersey
Pine Barrens. Longshore drift is continually moving sand northward along
the New Jersey shore. Much of the sand is probably derived for the reworking
of older Tertiary and Quaternary marine, beach and barrier island deposits
as changes in sea level caused the shoreline to migrate back and forth
across the shallow shelf and coastal plain. Evidence for this includes
the occasional appearance on the beach of cobble-to-boulder-sized concretions
derived from the older underlying sedimentary formations that are exposed
offshore. Island Beach is known for its large back beach sand dunes, particularly
along the southern end near Barnegat Inlet. Dunes are constantly building
up and shifting, even invading the beach parking areas (Figure 175). Visitors
are encouraged not to walk on the dunes so that plants can become established
to stabilize them. The existence of the dunes is an indication of the
harsh, windy conditions that can occur along the shore, particularly during
the winter months. These dunes represent an important natural line of
defense against the possibility of a massive assault of a hurricane or
nor'easter. Without the dunes, the narrow barrier island might easily
be breached, causing even greater destruction inshore.
Barnegat Inlet at the southern end of the beach is an exceptional example
of the tidal delta. The features of this tidal inlet can best be appreciated
from an aerial view (see Figure 174). Note the bifurcating channels in
the shallows on the bay side of the inlet. This is a flood-tidal delta.
These channels, sand bars, and islands are constantly changing as daily
tidal currents and storms rework the sand deposits. On the ocean side
of a natural inlet an ebb-tidal delta may form if longshore currents are
not strong enough to destroy them. At Barnegat Inlet the formation of
an ebb-tidal delta was largely ameliorated by the construction of jetties
on the north and south sides of the inlet. Building the jetties has helped
to stabilize the waterway, but has created other enduring problems in
the process. If nature were left unhindered, this now massive channel
probably would not have grown to its current size. Barnegat Inlet would
have eventually filled in, and a new opening to the bay would have eventually
formed elsewhere along the shore. However, the northward longshore drift
of sand continues. Shortly after the southern jetty was completed on the
south side of Barnegat Inlet, longshore drift of sand filled all the available
accomodation space. Sediment began to spill again into the channel, contributing
to the continued buildup of the tidal delta on the bay side. Likewise,
the northern jetty built blocked the northward flow of sand to replenish
Island Beach. This has resulted in the shoreward erosion of the barrier
island causing it to grow steadily narrower. To alleviate the depletion
of beach deposits, a slurry of sand is continuously pumped from the boat
channel over the north jetty to replenish sand to the barrier island.
The maintenance of the ship channel through the inlet and tidal delta
region will be a never-ending project. Island Beach and Barnegat Bay have endured intense developmental pressure:
the shore side of the bay is considered prime real estate. Unfortunately,
this development is having a negative impact on the quality of wildlife
habitat in the bay. Non-point sources of pollution are of greatest concern.
Non-point sources (unlike "point sources" such as sewage treatment
plants or landfills) include yard fertilizers and pesticides, septic sewage,
motor oil, and other spilled household products that accumulate in the
groundwater that discharges into the bay. Consider pet wastes: where one
pet may not contribute much, hundreds of thousands of pets in a heavily
urbanized area can supply a significant amount of pollution to the bay!
Also, the ever-increasing volume of treated municipal waste water approaches
or surpasses the natural supply of freshwater during the dryer late summer
and fall months. This unnatural supply of water is diluting portions of
the bay beyond the tolerance level of some species, thus threatening the
entire ecosystem.
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