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Foreshore Narrowing along the Coast of Southeast England, UK—A Reevaluation
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 17:05 authored by Uwe Dornbusch, Rendel B G Williams, Cherith A Moses, David A RobinsonForeshore (intertidal) narrowing and steepening have become increasingly discussed issues in coastal management. With rising sea levels they could be expected to lead to higher wave energies reaching the shore, thus enhancing rates of erosion. The present paper investigates changes in the position of the tide lines in Southeast England as measured from historic and modern maps. The changes can be partly explained by sea-level rise and shore platform erosion, but appear to be due mainly to systematic errors associated with the map sources. Comparison of the positional change of tide lines along the 170 km of chalk coast from East Sussex to the Isle of Thanet suggests that evidence for large-scale foreshore narrowing is meagre. The most likely scenario is one of parallel profile retreat resulting from natural processes such as relative sea-level rise
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Journal of Coastal ResearchExternal DOI
Issue
SuppVolume
4Page range
14-24Department affiliated with
- Geography Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes