Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Erosion
Tue Jan 20, 2004

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Hi, I'm Bryan Yeaton with The Weather Notebook's weekly Climate Change series. A new study by the Scripps Institute of Oceanography shows the California coastline is starting to crumble as global climate change pushes up the sea level. Correspondent Chris Richard has more.

CR: Under normal conditions, the shoreline maintains a rough balance. Ocean breakers tear away the beach, but rivers and streams keep flowing with their loads of sediment from further inland, piling up new sand along the shore. It evens out. But according to a new study by Scripps Institute scientist Douglas Inman, global climate change is undermining that balance on the California coast.

DI: With sea level rise, the platform the beach resides on will get deeper. The amount of sand required to have a beach will increase many fold. We don't have enough sand now, and so in the future we'll probably be without beaches.

CR: Engineers have faced a similar problem before this. Oil drilling has dropped the height of the shoreline in some areas, hastening wave erosion, says coastal engineer Craig Leidersdorf. So engineers add more sand offshore. Leidersdorf says that's expensive, but may be worth it to protect roads, for example.

CL: On the other hand, I don't think we can afford to protect everything to the same level. If it's a beach house, maybe we can allow that to erode, and in 50 years, no longer build on that piece of land.

CR: As sea levels continue to rise, pressure is sure to mount on authorities to set priorities.

Chris Richard reports from Los Angeles. The Weather Notebook is supported by the National Science Foundation and Subaru, Driven By What's Inside. Our Climate Change series is also funded by the New England Science Center Collaborative.





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