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8 - Resiliency of Beach–Inlet Systems Facing Sea-Level Rise, Storm Impacts, and Human Stresses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2022

Ping Wang
Affiliation:
University of South Florida
Tanya M. Beck
Affiliation:
US Army Engineer Research and Development Center
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Summary

The concept and application of resilience have been significantly expanded in the last three decades and the term is being used more and more broadly to represent a large-scale multi-disciplinary and comprehensive approach to both natural and human-related coastal issues associated with rising sea level, increased storm frequency and intensity, and human stressors. This chapter reviews the relevant findings from the recent global climate-change reports and introduces the resilience of barrier–inlet systems. In terms of the natural system, the survival of the very landform under the condition of accelerating sea-level rise is discussed via a conceptual model or a couple of numerical models. The resiliency of the human–natural barrier–inlet environment is far more complicated than just the natural system. The concepts and complicated framework outlined in the recent NRC (National Research Council) and USGCRP (US Global Climate Research Program) reports are reviewed, and illustrated with two case studies.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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