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Global long-term observations of coastal erosion and accretion
by
Pekel, Jean-Francois
, Feyen, Luc
, Voukouvalas, Evangelos
, Mentaschi, Lorenzo
, Vousdoukas, Michalis I.
in
704/106/242
/ 704/4111
/ Accretion
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coastal erosion
/ Coastal morphology
/ Coastal resources
/ Extreme weather
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Irrigation systems
/ Mangrove swamps
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural disasters
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea level rise
/ Sediments
/ Soil erosion
2018
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Global long-term observations of coastal erosion and accretion
by
Pekel, Jean-Francois
, Feyen, Luc
, Voukouvalas, Evangelos
, Mentaschi, Lorenzo
, Vousdoukas, Michalis I.
in
704/106/242
/ 704/4111
/ Accretion
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coastal erosion
/ Coastal morphology
/ Coastal resources
/ Extreme weather
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Irrigation systems
/ Mangrove swamps
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural disasters
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea level rise
/ Sediments
/ Soil erosion
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Global long-term observations of coastal erosion and accretion
by
Pekel, Jean-Francois
, Feyen, Luc
, Voukouvalas, Evangelos
, Mentaschi, Lorenzo
, Vousdoukas, Michalis I.
in
704/106/242
/ 704/4111
/ Accretion
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Coastal ecosystems
/ Coastal erosion
/ Coastal morphology
/ Coastal resources
/ Extreme weather
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Irrigation systems
/ Mangrove swamps
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural disasters
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea level rise
/ Sediments
/ Soil erosion
2018
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Global long-term observations of coastal erosion and accretion
Journal Article
Global long-term observations of coastal erosion and accretion
2018
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Overview
Changes in coastal morphology have broad consequences for the sustainability of coastal communities, structures and ecosystems. Although coasts are monitored locally in many places, understanding long-term changes at a global scale remains a challenge. Here we present a global and consistent evaluation of coastal morphodynamics over 32 years (1984–2015) based on satellite observations. Land losses and gains were estimated from the changes in water presence along more than 2 million virtual transects. We find that the overall surface of eroded land is about 28,000 km
2
, twice the surface of gained land, and that often the extent of erosion and accretion is in the order of km. Anthropogenic factors clearly emerge as the dominant driver of change, both as planned exploitation of coastal resources, such as building coastal structures, and as unforeseen side effects of human activities, for example the installment of dams, irrigation systems and structures that modify the flux of sediments, or the clearing of coastal ecosystems, such as mangrove forests. Another important driver is the occurrence of natural disasters such as tsunamis and extreme storms. The observed global trend in coastal erosion could be enhanced by Sea Level Rise and more frequent extreme events under a changing climate.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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