Understanding the environmental pathways and surface modification of beach sand grains is essential for reconstructing coastal dynamics and assessing the suitability of natural sands for engineering applications. This study applies a multiproxy approach—integrating grain roundness classification, SEM microtextural analysis, and XPS surface chemistry—to beach sediments from four coastal sectors of Latvia: Liepaja, Ventspils, Riga, and Salacgrīva. The results reveal clear spatial differences in grain maturity, abrasion signatures, biological imprinting, and nanoscale surface composition. Liepaja is characterised by sub-rounded to rounded grains with abundant percussion pits and abrasion surfaces, indicating prolonged high-energy wave reworking. Ventspils retains angular grains with fresh conchoidal fractures, reflecting rapid sediment renewal from glacial and coastal sources. Riga exhibits weak abrasion and hydrated particulate coatings typical of low-energy brackish environments. Salacgrīva displays strong fluvial influence, including persistent diatom and algal microtextural features and elevated oxygenated carbon and metal-associated XPS signals. These findings demonstrate strong coupling between grain-surface microtextures and surface chemistry and reveal distinct sedimentary fingerprints linked to environmental setting. The multiproxy framework presented here improves understanding of Baltic coastal sediment pathways and provides a preliminary basis for future evaluation of natural sands in filtration and other environmental engineering applications.
Dekhtyar et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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