Javascript must be enabled to continue!
How Visualizing Seafloor Data Improves Coastal Management Strategies
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Bathymetry, the measurement of underwater depth, is crucial for informed coastal management. This study highlights the value of bathymetric data in coastal planning, decision-making, and the understanding of dynamic coastal processes. Its insights are essential for the sustainable management of marine environments. Natural coastal hazards, e.g., storm surges, earthquake, coastal landslides, tsunami, sea level rise, erosion, tracking pollutant movement, rip currents, could be evaluated, and zoning plans for such areas can be made with the use of this information. Bathymetry information is also useful for studying sediment transport, coastal change, and man-made impacts on the ocean. Thus, sustainable development and the protection of coastal resources need the use of bathymetry data in coastal management. Our research on bathymetric data visualization extends its applications beyond flooding, benefiting fields including fisheries, infrastructure planning, offshore energy, erosion control, coastal flow slides (coastal landslide), thereby paving the way for sustainable coastal development. This innovative approach contributes to global coastal sustainability efforts, combining engineering solutions with both human and marine conversation-centric perspective for effective decision-making. By integrating environmental and human concerns, this approach empowers informed decision-making, contributing to a future where thriving ecosystems and human progress coexist along our precious coastlines.
Title: How Visualizing Seafloor Data Improves Coastal Management Strategies
Description:
Abstract
Bathymetry, the measurement of underwater depth, is crucial for informed coastal management.
This study highlights the value of bathymetric data in coastal planning, decision-making, and the understanding of dynamic coastal processes.
Its insights are essential for the sustainable management of marine environments.
Natural coastal hazards, e.
g.
, storm surges, earthquake, coastal landslides, tsunami, sea level rise, erosion, tracking pollutant movement, rip currents, could be evaluated, and zoning plans for such areas can be made with the use of this information.
Bathymetry information is also useful for studying sediment transport, coastal change, and man-made impacts on the ocean.
Thus, sustainable development and the protection of coastal resources need the use of bathymetry data in coastal management.
Our research on bathymetric data visualization extends its applications beyond flooding, benefiting fields including fisheries, infrastructure planning, offshore energy, erosion control, coastal flow slides (coastal landslide), thereby paving the way for sustainable coastal development.
This innovative approach contributes to global coastal sustainability efforts, combining engineering solutions with both human and marine conversation-centric perspective for effective decision-making.
By integrating environmental and human concerns, this approach empowers informed decision-making, contributing to a future where thriving ecosystems and human progress coexist along our precious coastlines.
Related Results
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
*** Available Only Through ASCE ***
http://ascelibrary.aip.org/browse/asce/vol_title.jsp?scode=C
This Proceedings contains more than 300 papers pre...
Gas Hydrate Recoveries in the Gulf of Mexico: What Is the Shallow Water Depth Limit for Hydrate Occurrence?
Gas Hydrate Recoveries in the Gulf of Mexico: What Is the Shallow Water Depth Limit for Hydrate Occurrence?
ABSTRACT
Gas hydrates are known to occur in the upper 6 meters of the seafloor in the Gulf of Mexico. This statement is supported by a greater number of hydrate s...
High-Resolution Acoustic Seafloor Mapping
High-Resolution Acoustic Seafloor Mapping
ABSTRACT
SeaMARC/S is a 150 kHz towed sonar mapping system that produces synoptic acoustic backscatter images and hydrographic-quality swath bathymetry charts in ...
Safe Place: Flood Resilient Housing Adaptation
Safe Place: Flood Resilient Housing Adaptation
<p>The Earth’s climate is warming, and with a changing climate comes rapid changes to the parameters of many of the natural and human systems we exist within. The climate cha...
Integrated Site Investigation of Seafloor Features and Associated Fauna, Shenzi Field, Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
Integrated Site Investigation of Seafloor Features and Associated Fauna, Shenzi Field, Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
Abstract
The continental slope of the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico is characterized by complex seafloor topography caused in part by shallow salt deformation. Locally...
The Mississippi Canyon 118 Gas Hydrate Site: A Complex Natural System
The Mississippi Canyon 118 Gas Hydrate Site: A Complex Natural System
Abstract
The easternmost gas hydrate site in Mississippi Canyon (MC) was discovered using the Johnson Sea-Link research submersible in 2002. Free gas (C1-C5 hydro...
The Seafloor Nodule Collector: Best Available Techniques and Future Developments
The Seafloor Nodule Collector: Best Available Techniques and Future Developments
Abstract
On top of the abyssal plains of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the Pacific Ocean lie trillions of polymetallic nodules that contain many of the metals...
Habitat map plays an active role for coastal eco-DRR by multi-stakeholders
Habitat map plays an active role for coastal eco-DRR by multi-stakeholders
<p>Coastal land- and sea-scapes are composed of diverse habitats such as reed bed, salt marsh, tidal-flats, sea grass fields, seaweed grounds, sandy and rocky-shores....

