Case Study: Eastern Seaboard Flashcards
1
Q
Problems of hard engeniering (6)
A
- Hard methods = ineffective
- Sea walls and other hard engineering methods only protect buildings, not the beaches (e.g: Beach in Galveston was lost in the hurricane in 1900
- Sea walls fail in Texas, South Carolina, California due to poor maintenance and construction
- Marshfield,Massachusetts and Monmouth Beach, New Jersey = gone
- Rising sea level makes seawall not effective
- People disliked the ugly sceneries
2
Q
Factors leading to a rise in sea level (3)
A
- Flat topography of the coastal plains (rise of few mm/year can push the ocean a meter in land in Florida)
- North American coast is sinking relative to ocean (e.g NY = 1.5mm/year)
- Extensive coastal development
3
Q
Alternative for hard (6)
A
- Strategic retreat (allow erosion)
- Land use management (Engineers stopped challenging nature, now work with natural process
- The Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act limits building on coastal land
- Ban sea walls to control erosion on coastal dunes (sea walls prevented the supply of sand to the dunes)
- North Carolina banned hard engineering methods like groyne or rock strong points since the beaches are major assets to the state
- 1986 doubled the distance from sea for large building
4
Q
Alternative: Beach replenishment (1-(1-2)
A
- Atlantic City, Virgina, Miami Benefit: A compromise b/w building defenses and leave shore to erode
Draw back
- Cost: 1980 US spent $64m on beach replenishment in Miami
- Loss of new sand: Erosion removed 30m of sand where sand was extracted to keep the beach stabilised at 60m wide
5
Q
Conclusion (3)
A
- Rising sea level and retreating coasts = continuing issue
- Protective hard engineering for major coastal cities like New York (since they’re economically important –> can’t retreat)
- Soft engineering in less developed area (Carolina Beach, North Carolina)
6
Q
A