Publications
The Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program publications are listed here. Search by topics and by year.
Filter Total Items: 2189
Dynamic modeling of barrier island response to hurricane storm surge under future sea level rise Dynamic modeling of barrier island response to hurricane storm surge under future sea level rise
Sea level rise (SLR) has the potential to exacerbate the impacts of extreme storm events on the coastal landscape. This study examines the coupled interactions of SLR on storm-driven hydrodynamics and barrier island morphology. A numerical model is used to simulate the hydrodynamic and morphodynamic impacts of two Gulf of Mexico hurricanes under present-day and future sea levels. SLR...
Authors
Davina Passeri, Matthew Bilskie, Nathaniel Plant, Joseph W. Long, Scott Hagen
Controls on submarine canyon head evolution: Monterey Canyon, offshore central California Controls on submarine canyon head evolution: Monterey Canyon, offshore central California
The Monterey submarine canyon, incised across the continental shelf in Monterey Bay, California, provides a record of the link between onshore tectonism, fluvial transport, and deep-marine deposition. High-resolution seismic-reflection imaging in Monterey Bay reveals an extensive paleocanyon unit buried below the seafloor of the continental shelf around Monterey and Soquel canyon heads
Authors
Katherine Maier, Samuel Johnson, Patrick Hart
Statistical approach to neural network imaging of karst systems in 3D seismic reflection data Statistical approach to neural network imaging of karst systems in 3D seismic reflection data
The current lack of a robust, standardized technique for geophysical mapping of karst systems can be attributed to both the complexity of the environment and prior technological limitations. Abrupt lateral variations in physical properties that are inherent to karst systems generate significant geophysical noise, challenging conventional seismic signal processing and interpretation...
Authors
Daniel Ebuna, Jared W. Kluesner, Kevin Cunningham, Joel Edwards
Collections management plan for the U.S. Geological Survey Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center Samples Repository Collections management plan for the U.S. Geological Survey Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center Samples Repository
Since 2002, the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center Samples Repository has been supporting research by providing secure storage for geological, biological, and geochemical samples; maintaining organization and an active inventory of these sample collections; and providing researchers access to these scientific collections for study and reuse. Over the years, local storage...
Authors
Brian J. Buczkowski
Rapid, remote assessment of Hurricane Matthew impacts using four-dimensional structure-from-motion photogrammetry Rapid, remote assessment of Hurricane Matthew impacts using four-dimensional structure-from-motion photogrammetry
Timely assessment of coastal landforms and structures after storms is important for evaluating storm impacts, aiding emergency response and restoration, and initializing and assessing morphological models. Four-dimensional multiview photogrammetry, also known as structure from motion (4D SfM), provides a method for generating three-dimensional reconstructions of landscapes at two times...
Authors
Christopher Sherwood, Jonathan Warrick, Andrew Hill, Andrew Ritchie, Brian Andrews, Nathaniel Plant
Transient coastal landscapes: Rising sea level threatens salt marshes Transient coastal landscapes: Rising sea level threatens salt marshes
Salt marshes are important coastal environments that provide key ecological services. As sea level rise has accelerated globally, concerns about the ability of salt marshes to survive submergence are increasing. Previous estimates of likely survival of salt marshes were based on ratios of sea level rise to marsh platform accretion. Here we took advantage of an unusual, long-term (1979...
Authors
Ivan Valiela, Javier Lloret, Tynan Bowyer, Simon Miner, David Remsen, Elizabeth Elmstrom, Charlotte Cogswell, E. Thieler
The foraminifera of Chincoteague Bay, Assateague Island, and the surrounding areas: A regional distribution study The foraminifera of Chincoteague Bay, Assateague Island, and the surrounding areas: A regional distribution study
Foraminiferal census data from Chincoteague Bay, Newport Bay, the salt marshes of Assateague Island, adjacent mainland salt marshes, and the inner-shelf, were assessed to determine the current assemblages in Chincoteague Bay, and how the different environments surrounding the bay, and the gradients within the bay, influence the microfossil distribution. Determining the current background
Authors
Alisha Ellis, Jaimie E. Shaw, Lisa Osterman, Christopher Smith
Projected 21st century coastal flooding in the Southern California Bight. Part 2: Tools for assessing climate change-driven coastal hazards and socio-economic impacts Projected 21st century coastal flooding in the Southern California Bight. Part 2: Tools for assessing climate change-driven coastal hazards and socio-economic impacts
This paper is the second of two that describes the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) approach for quantifying physical hazards and socio-economic hazard exposure in coastal zones affected by sea-level rise and changing coastal storms. The modelling approach, presented in Part 1, downscales atmospheric global-scale projections to local scale coastal flood impacts by deterministically...
Authors
Li Erikson, Patrick L. Barnard, Andrea C. O'Neill, Nathan Wood, Jeanne Jones, Juliette Finzi Hart, Sean Vitousek, Patrick Limber, Maya Hayden, Michael Fitzgibbon, Jessica Lovering, Amy Foxgrover
Environmental controls, emergent scaling, and predictions of greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in coastal salt marshes Environmental controls, emergent scaling, and predictions of greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in coastal salt marshes
Coastal salt marshes play an important role in mitigating global warming by removing atmospheric carbon at a high rate. We investigated the environmental controls and emergent scaling of major greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) in coastal salt marshes by conducting data analytics and empirical modeling. The underlying hypothesis is that the salt...
Authors
Omar Abdul-Aziz, Khandker Ishitaq, Jianwu Tang, Serena Moseman-Valtierra, Kevin Kroeger, Meagan Gonneea Eagle, Jordan Mora, Kate Morkeski
The Santa Cruz Basin submarine landslide complex, southern California: Repeated failure of uplifted basin sediment The Santa Cruz Basin submarine landslide complex, southern California: Repeated failure of uplifted basin sediment
The Santa Cruz Basin (SCB) is one of several fault-bounded basins within the California Continental Borderland that has drawn interest over the years for its role in the tectonic evolution of the region, but also because it contains a record of a variety of modes of sedimentary mass transport (i.e., open slope vs. canyon-confined systems). Here, we present a suite of new high-resolution...
Authors
Daniel S. Brothers, Katherine Maier, Jared W. Kluesner, James Conrad, Jason Chaytor
A multiscale natural community and species-level vulnerability assessment of the Gulf Coast, USA A multiscale natural community and species-level vulnerability assessment of the Gulf Coast, USA
Vulnerability assessments combine quantitative and qualitative evaluations of the exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity of species or natural communities to current and future threats. When combined with the economic, ecological or evolutionary value of the species, vulnerability assessments quantify the relative risk to regional species and natural communities and can enable...
Authors
Joshua Reece, Amanda Watson, Patricia (Soupy) Dalyander, C. Edwards, Laura Geselbracht, Megan LaPeyre, Blair Tirpak, John M. Tirpak, Mark Woodrey
Impact of pore fluid chemistry on fine-grained sediment fabric and compressibility Impact of pore fluid chemistry on fine-grained sediment fabric and compressibility
Fines, defined here as grains or particles, less than 75 ÎĽm in diameter, exist nearly ubiquitously in natural sediment, even those classified as coarse. Macroscopic sediment properties, such as compressibility, which relates applied effective stress to the resulting sediment deformation, depend on the fabric of fines. Unlike coarse grains, fines have sizes and masses small enough to be...
Authors
Junbong Jang, Shuang Cao, Laura Stern, Jongwon Jung, William F. Waite