It is important to determine whether a study is
reporting beach erosion and / or shoreline erosion.
Not exact matches
The first projection of future
beach erosion all along Japanese coasts was published in 1994 by Mimura et al. (1994), who calculated that
beach erosion caused by SLR would occur in values of 0.30, 0.65, and 1.00 m based on the projections of the IPCC First Assessment
Report (IPCC, 1990).
«The
beach above high tide will be lost to
erosion with approximately 1 to 2 ft of sea - level rise, at which point
beach erosion and coastal storms will threaten sea wall integrity,» the
report said.
In 2011 the State of the
Beach report therefore focused on re-defining the
Erosion Response indicator to more completely address coastal climate change adaptation, specifically concentrating on the response of coastal areas to sea level rise.
«The goal of the State of the
Beach Report Card is to increase awareness of the enormous threats facing our coastlines and to improve how states and municipalities respond to coastal
erosion and sea level rise,» said Stefanie Sekich - Quinn, Coastal Preservation Manager for the Surfrider Foundation.
Beaches and historic coastlines are likely to be reshaped by coastal
erosion, with the rate expected to increase fourfold, the
report said.