Publications
The Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program publications are listed here. Search by topics and by year.
Filter Total Items: 2141
Sri Lanka field survey after the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
An International Tsunami Survey Team (ITST) consisting of scientists from the United States, New Zealand, and Sri Lanka evaluated the impacts of the 26 December 2004 transoceanic tsunami in Sri Lanka two weeks after the event. Tsunami runup height, inundation distance, morphological changes, and sedimentary characteristics of deposits were recorded and analyzed along the southwest and...
Authors
James Goff, Philip L-F. Liu, Bretwood Higman, Robert A. Morton, Bruce Jaffe, Haindra Fernando, Patrick J. Lynett, Hermann M. Fritz, Costas E. Synolakis, Starin Fernando
Sedimentary processes in modern and ancient oceanic arc settings: evidence from the Jurassic Talkeetna Formation of Alaska and the Mariana and Tonga Arcs, western Pacific
Sediment deposited around oceanic volcanic ares potentially provides the most complete record of the tectonic and geochemical evolution of active margins. The use of such tectonic and geochemical records requires an accurate understanding of sedimentary dynamics in an arc setting: processes of deposition and reworking that affect the degree to which sediments represent the...
Authors
Amy E. Draut, Peter D. Clift
Tsunami: wave of change
No abstract available.
Authors
Eric L. Geist, Vasily V. Titov, Costas E. Synolakis
Revisiting Frazier's subdeltas: enhancing datasets with dimensionality, better to understand geologic systems
Scientific knowledge from the past century is commonly represented by two-dimensional figures and graphs, as presented in manuscripts and maps. Using today's computer technology, this information can be extracted and projected into three- and four-dimensional perspectives. Computer models can be applied to datasets to provide additional insight into complex spatial and temporal systems...
Authors
James G. Flocks
Integration of coral reef ecosystem process studies and remote sensing
Worldwide, local-scale anthropogenic stress combined with global climate change is driving shifts in the state of reef benthic communities from coral-rich to micro- or macroalgal-dominated (Knowlton, 1992; Done, 1999). Such phase shifts in reef benthic communities may be either abrupt or gradual, and case studies from diverse ocean basins demonstrate that recovery, while uncertain...
Authors
John Brook, Kimberly K. Yates, Robert S. Halley
Constraining rates and trends of historical wetland loss, Mississippi River Delta Plain, south-central Louisiana
The timing, magnitude, and rate of wetland loss were described for five wetland-loss hotspots in the Terrebonne Basin of the Mississippi River delta plain. Land and water areas were mapped for 34 dates between 1956 and 2004 from historical National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) datasets, aerial photographs, and Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) satellite images. Since 1956, the emergent land area...
Authors
Julie C Bernier, Robert A. Morton, John Barras
Possible deep-water gas hydrate accumulations in the Bering Sea
Seismic reflection images from the deep-water Aleutian and Bowers Basins of the Bering Sea contain many hundreds of acoustic Velocity-AMPlitude (VAMP) anomalies, each of which may represent a large accumulation of natural gas hydrate. Against a backdrop of essentially horizontal sedimentary reflections, the VAMP anomalies stand out as both high-amplitude bright spots and zones of...
Authors
Ginger Barth, David W. Scholl, Jonathan R. Childs
Local thickening of the Cascadia forearc crust and the origin of seismic reflectors in the uppermost mantle
Seismic reflection profiles from three different surveys of the Cascadia forearc are interpreted using P wave velocities and relocated hypocentres, which were both derived from the first arrival travel time inversion of wide-angle seismic data and local earthquakes. The subduction decollement, which is characterized beneath the continental shelf by a reflection of 0.5 s duration, can be...
Authors
A.J. Calvert, K. Ramachandran, H. Kao, M. A. Fisher
Sediment distribution and transport across the continental shelf and slope under idealized wind forcing
Resuspension, transport, and deposition of sediments over the continental shelf and slope are complex processes and there is still a need to understand the underlying spatial and temporal dynamical scales. As a step towards this goal, a two-dimensional slice model (zero gradients in the alongshore direction) based on the primitive flow equations and a range of sediment classes has been...
Authors
S.A. Condie, C. R. Sherwood
Giant sand waves at the mouth of San Francisco Bay
A field of giant sand waves, among the largest in the world, recently was mapped in high resolution for the first time during a multibeam survey in 2004 and 2005 through the strait of the Golden Gate at the mouth of San Francisco Bay in California (Figure la). This massive bed form field covers an area of approximately four square kilometers in water depths ranging from 30 to 106 meters...
Authors
P.L. Barnard, D.M. Hanes, D. M. Rubin, R.G. Kvitek
Parameterization and simulation of near bed orbital velocities under irregular waves in shallow water
A set of empirical formulations is derived that describe important wave properties in shallow water as functions of commonly used parameters such as wave height, wave period, local water depth and local bed slope. These wave properties include time varying near-bed orbital velocities and statistical properties such as the distribution of wave height and wave period. Empirical expressions...
Authors
B. Elfrink, D.M. Hanes, B.G. Ruessink
Coastal landslide material loss rates associated with severe climatic events
Deep-seated landslides along the California coast deliver large amounts of material to the nearshore littoral environment. Landslide movement, a combined result of slope base undercutting by waves and ground saturation, is highly episodic. Movement occurs primarily during periods of high rainfall and large waves, such as those associated with El Nin??o events. This analysis applies...
Authors
C.J. Hapke, K.R. Green