“…Variation in the local composition of beach and coastal dune sands is controlled by the composition of new sediment added to the system by stream or river input, erosion of bounding or outcropping geological units (cliffs and shoreline outcrop of rocks), onshore movement of sediment from subtidal areas (high tide bars), longshore transport and mechanical abrasion of the metastable minerals, storm transport of beach sediment to deeper water, selective wind transport of sediment to the foredunes, cycling of coastal dune sands back onto beaches, geochemical removal of metastable minerals within the dunes and offshore migration of the very fine sand and silt fraction (Abuodha, ; Davis & Fitzgerald, ; Pye, , ; Suttener, Basu, & Mack, ; Valloni, ). Beach sediments found along the passive margin of continents are commonly predominantly composed of quartz sands containing 10%–15% or less of feldspar and rock fragments in the areas not under the influence of major rivers transporting large concentrations of feldspars and rock fragments sediment to the coast (Bhatia, ; Dickinson et al., ; Garzanti et al., ; Kasper‐Zubillaga, Armstrong‐Altrin, Carranza‐Edwards, Morton‐Berma, & Santa Cruz, ; Lucchi, ; Potter, ; Table ). Long distance and duration transport in the littoral zone in passive margin settings can produce predominantly quartz sands (quartz arenites) such as those found in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, the shorelines of Florida and most of Brazil (Hsu, ; Martens, ; Potter, ).…”