“…The processes operating during the lifetimes of tidal ridges and bars and their ultimate fates have been addressed through a combination of active monitoring (for example, time‐lapse bathymetric data, as here), sampling and geophysical surveys (Berné et al ., 1994, 1998; Fenies & Taslet, 1998; Reynaud et al ., 1999; Trentesaux et al ., 1999; Vecchi et al ., 2013; Franzetti et al ., 2015; Lockhart et al ., 2018), hydrodynamic modelling (De Vriend, 1990; Hulscher et al ., 1993; van Veelen et al ., 2018), and analyses of ancient examples preserved in cored subsurface sections (Folkestad and Satur, 2008; Schwarz et al ., 2011; Messina et al ., 2014; Wei et al ., 2018; Chiarella et al ., 2020) and in the rock record (Tillman & Martinsen, 1984; Gaynor & Swift, 1988; Mellere & Steel, 1995; Martinsen et al ., 1999; Yoshida, 2000; Plink‐Björklund & Steel, 2006; Plink‐Björklund, 2008; Steel et al ., 2008, 2012; Pontén & Plink‐Björklund, 2009; Hampson, 2010; Michaud, 2011; Martinius, 2012; Olariu et al ., 2012b; Scasso et al ., 2012; Chen et al ., 2014; López et al ., 2016; Michaud & Dalrymple, 2016; Sharafi et al ., 2016; Leszczyński & Nemec, 2020; Longhitano et al ., 2021). The latter potentially provide the finest spatial information but, before assessing it, confidence needs to be established that tidal ridges or bars have been correctly identified.…”