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Doubling of coastal erosion under rising sea level by mid-century in Hawaiʻi

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Tiffany R. Anderson, Charles H. Fletcher, Matthew M. Barbee, L. Neil Frazer, and Bradley M. Romine, 2015-03-18, Doubling of coastal erosion under rising sea level by mid-century in Hawaiʻi: Natural Hazards.

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Abstract (from http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11069-015-1698-6): Chronic erosion in Hawaiʻi causes beach loss, damages homes and infrastructure, and endangers critical habitat. These problems will likely worsen with increased sea level rise (SLR). We forecast future coastal change by combining historical shoreline trends with projected accelerations in SLR ( IPCC RCP8.5) using the Davidson-Arnott profile model. The resulting erosion hazard zones are overlain on aerial photos and other GIS layers to provide a tool for identifying assets exposed to future coastal erosion. We estimate rates and distances of shoreline change for ten study sites across the Hawaiian Islands. Excluding one beach (Kailua) historically dominated [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Pacific Islands CASC

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journalNatural Hazards
parts
typestartPage
value1
typeendPage
value29
typedoi
value10.1007/s11069-015-1698-6
typeissn
value0921-030X

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