CivilEA.com
  • Subscribe !
  • Register
  • Login
  • Home
  • Members
  • Help
  • Search
Civil Engineering Association eBooks Geotechnical Engineering Foundation & Geotechnics in general Formation, Evolution, and Stability of Coastal Cliffs–Status and Trends

Formation, Evolution, and Stability of Coastal Cliffs–Status and Trends
 shadabg

Professional Member

Subscriber
India
User ID: 27905
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 1,749
Threads: 166
Likes: 8,553 in 1,623 posts
Given Likes: 3737
Points:66,329 EP
#1
10-05-2012, 10:49 AM (This post was last modified: 10-05-2012, 10:56 AM by shadabg.)
Formation, Evolution, and Stability of Coastal Cliffs–Status and Trends

Author: Monty A. Hampton and Gary B. Griggs | Size: 15 MB | Format: PDF | Quality: Original preprint | Publisher: U.S. Department of the Interior & U.S. Geological Survey | Year: 2004 | pages: 129

[Image: 42380510691105268477.jpg]


[Image: info.png]

The Ocean Studies Board of the National Research Council recently reviewed the U.S. Geological Survey’s Coastal and Marine Geology (USGS-CMG) program (National Research Council, 1999). One of the Board’s primary recommendations was that CMG prepare comprehensive assessments of the nation’s coastal and marine regions, drawing on expertise not only from within the USGS, but also from outside agencies and academic institutions. In response to that recommendation, this report assesses the status and trends of coastal cliffs along the shorelines of the conterminous United States and the Great Lakes. By “status” is meant the present distribution and character of coastal cliffs, as well as their current relevance to social issues such as coastal development. By “trends” is meant the changes in status caused by both geological forces and human activities.

Coastal cliffs are steep escarpments at the coastline. They commonly form during times of rising sea level, such as the present, as the shoreline advances landward and erodes the elevated landmass. Coastal cliffs are a common landform, particularly on the west, northeast, and Great Lakes coasts of the United States, as well as within large estuaries. The land adjacent to coastal cliffs has been heavily developed along much of the coast, particularly in urban areas where the natural instability and progressive retreat of the cliffs pose a threat to life and property. Coastal land is permanently lost when coastal cliffs collapse and retreat landward, which is an important national issue in coastal planning, management, and engineering.

[Image: download.png]
Code:
***************************************
Content of this section is hidden, You must be registered and activate your account to see this content. See this link to read how you can remove this limitation:

http://forum.civilea.com/thread-27464.html
***************************************


[Image: mirror.png]
Code:
***************************************
Content of this section is hidden, You must be registered and activate your account to see this content. See this link to read how you can remove this limitation:

http://forum.civilea.com/thread-27464.html
***************************************


This post has been made by CivilEA Post-Generator ver 2.1.6
Regards,
Shadab

"Dream till you Live, Chase till you Die"



[-] The following 7 users Like shadabg's post:7 users Like shadabg's post
  • blaze, cace-01, oanm2000, zrilek, Dell_Brett, isurya, Jackass
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »

Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)



  • View a Printable Version
  • Subscribe to this thread

Designed by CivilEA - Powered by MyBB

Linear Mode
Threaded Mode