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Hoda El Safty and Reza Marsooli
Aerial photographs and field studies have revealed a rapid deterioration of salt marshes in Jamaica Bay, New York. Past studies have linked marsh deterioration to sediment supply, water quality, storms, and sea level rise. Yet ship wakes and their potent...
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Rutger W. A. Siemes, Bas W. Borsje, Roy J. Daggenvoorde and Suzanne J. M. H. Hulscher
Salt marshes are increasingly recognized as resilient and sustainable supplements to traditional engineering structures for protecting coasts against flooding. Nevertheless, many salt marshes face severe erosion. There is a consensus that providing struc...
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Antoine Mury, Matthieu Jeanson, Antoine Collin, Dorothée James and Samuel Etienne
In the current context of decadal global changes and predicted sea level rise, annual erosion is one of the most obvious indicators of threats to coastal systems. Shoreline monitoring during high energy events is therefore a crucial action to prevent and...
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Anthony M. Priestas, Giulio Mariotti, Nicoletta Leonardi and Sergio Fagherazzi
The relationship between lateral erosion of salt marshes and wind waves is studied in Hog Island Bay, Virginia USA, with high-resolution field measurements and aerial photographs. Marsh retreat is compared to wave climate calculated in the bay using the ...
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