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Luigi Massaro, Giovanni Forte, Melania De Falco and Antonio Santo
The morphoevolution of coastal areas is due to the interactions of multiple continental and marine processes that define a highly dynamic environment. These processes can occur as rapid catastrophic events (e.g., landslides, storms, and coastal land use)...
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Sompratana Ritphring, Pattrakorn Nidhinarangkoon and Keiko Udo
Thailand?s current beach management strategies lack integration across sectors, resulting in conflicts of interest and insufficient consideration of diverse beach uses. The complexity of environmental, socio-economic, and coastal disasters challenge poli...
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Pattrakorn Nidhinarangkoon, Sompratana Ritphring, Kanon Kino and Taikan Oki
Phuket, the study area of this work with 33 sandy beaches, provides about 15% of the nation?s gross domestic product from the tourism industry. Many factors cause shoreline changes affecting beach areas, such as seasonal erosion and rising sea levels. In...
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Yu-Hai Wang, Yan-Hong Wang, An-Jun Deng, Hao-Chuan Feng, Dang-Wei Wang and Chuan-Sheng Guo
Downdrift shoreline recession associated with the construction of a shore-crossing hard structure represents one of coastal erosional hotspots that must be addressed for an integrated, sustainable coastal zone management. To prevent siltation within the ...
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Alexander Wang, Xiao Hua Wang and Gang Yang
Extreme wind-driven storm events have the potential to erode beach systems. Along the East Coast of Australia, storm events have been responsible for beach erosion in many coast-facing, open beaches. This paper investigates the potential impacts of wind-...
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Maurizio D?Anna, Deborah Idier, Bruno Castelle, Sean Vitousek and Goneri Le Cozannet
Long-term (>decades) coastal recession due to sea-level rise (SLR) has been estimated using the Bruun Rule for nearly six decades. Equilibrium-based shoreline models have been shown to skillfully predict short-term wave-driven shoreline change on time sc...
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Pablo Muñoz López, Andrés Payo, Michael A. Ellis, Francisco Criado-Aldeanueva and Gareth Owen Jenkins
Recession of coastal cliffs (bluffs) is a significant problem globally, as around 80% of Earth?s coastlines are classified as sea cliffs. It has long been recognised that beaches control wave energy dissipation on the foreshore and, as a result, can prov...
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Giovanni Cannata, Marco Tamburrino and Francesco Gallerano
The aim of coastal structures for the defense from erosion is to modify the hydrodynamic fields that would naturally occur with the wave motion, to produce zones of sedimentation of solid material, and to combat the recession of the coastline. T-head gro...
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Bárbara F. V. Vieira, José L. S. Pinho, Joaquim A. O. Barros and José S. Antunes do Carmo
Coastal areas accommodate a great part of large metropolises as they support a great amount of economic and leisure activities. The attraction of people to coastal zones is contributing to an intense and continuous urbanization of these areas, while the ...
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Olga Kuznetsova and Yana Saprykina
The effect of the underwater bar position on a sandy beach profile was studied on a timescale of one storm, using the XBeach numerical model. The largest shoreline regress occurred in the first hour of storm. For the chosen wave regime an underwater prof...
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