When I think about coastal erosion, I think about Pacifica,
CA (photo below from coastalcare.org). After a declaration of a state of emergency in January after El Niño
related storms, the news in February about yet another chunk of sandy cliff
falling into the ocean and houses in need of abandonment was not new. A drone video of the area
is clear. A lot of information
can be found about how in a few years the cliff has eroded.
Recently two online portals have been developed as an
interactive tool for any user to explore what coastal hazards are all about. Also,
the National
Assessment of Coastal Change Hazards of the USGS has very good
information about coastal issues in the country.
The NOAA’s Sea Level
Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts (v. 2.0) website let you browse over possible
scenarios of sea level rise and coast vulnerability. A great link to try!
Today I am going to focus on another link, the USGS Coastal
Change Portal. The USGS
Coastal Change Hazards Portal is a new tool that allows
anyone to explore how coasts change due to: extreme storms, shoreline change,
and sea level rise.
Sea level Rise: there are two methods used to address this:
a Coastal Vulnerability Index (CVI), and a probabilistic assessment of
shoreline change.
CVI: ‘a preliminary overview, at a National scale, of the
relative susceptibility of the Nation's coast to sea-level rise through the use
of CVI. This classification is based upon the following variables:
geomorphology, regional coastal slope, tide range, wave height, relative
sea-level rise and shoreline erosion and accretion rates. The combination of
these variables and the association of these variables to each other furnish a
broad overview of regions where physical changes are likely to occur due to
sea-level rise’. A quick image shown here shows how much red (very high
vulnerability) our California coasts possess.
As you can see this new tool will help tremendously to
manage areas and to get a broad idea of what is happening on the US coasts.
Explore those links!-