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Ocean Topics
- Climate & Weather
- How the Ocean Works
- Ocean & Human Lives
- Ocean Life
- Sustainable Ocean
- Ocean Tech
Spend just a few minutes on almost any beach, and the ocean will soon demonstrate a few of the many ways it can transform the narrow strip of shallow water and adjacent land that makes up the shoreline. With every wave, sediments are deposited and withdrawn in complex ways. On a much larger scale, waves, currents, wind, and tides form complex interactions over time to cause erosion along some stretches of shoreline and accretion (growth) in others.
This is just the beginning, however. Add storms, coastal development, and sea level rise to the mix and the fact of our constantly changing shoreline becomes a far more complex and serious issue.
In the U.S. alone, billions of dollars are spent each year in housing, businesses, and recreation, national security, and infrastructure along our dynamic coasts. While beach erosion threatens property near the shoreline, it also profoundly influences natural systems that regulate the exchanges of water, nutrients and organisms with the open ocean. As a result, billions more are used to protect wetlands, maintain beaches and waterways, and rebuild damaged or aging infrastructure.
Salt marshes, estuaries, and mangroves, for example, are a critical component of our coastal ecosystem and are particularly vulnerable to human activity and accelerated sea-level rise. Tidal marshes, the dominant estuarine habitat along the East Coast of the U.S., are ecologically and economically important as they filter and absorb terrestrial nutrients and pollutants, buffer coastlines from waves and storm surges, and provide nurseries for fish and other marine animals.
Linking diverse coastal processes and the impacts of natural and human-induced change requires a systems-oriented, multidisciplinary approach to tackling basic science questions that can have real and lasting impacts. Scientists are working to identify areas subject to both long- and short-term coastline change, and understand the many factors influencing these changes, in order to help individuals and governments make better decisions regarding management of important coastal resources.
Articles Related to Changing Shorelines & Erosion
From Oceanus Magazine
An introduction to marsh bothering
Novel tool sheds light on coral reef erosion
Dune buggies and diving:
Adapt or retreat:
The ocean science-art connection
Marshes, Mosquitoes, and Sea Level Rise
More Floods & Higher Sea Levels
News Releases
New federal funding to accelerate ocean-climate resilience
Interactive Climate Tour Opens in Woods Hole
Study Finds No Direct Link Between North Atlantic Ocean Currents, Sea Level Along New England Coast
Why Is Sea Level Rising Faster in Some Places Along the U.S. East Coast Than Others?
WHOI Receives $150,000 Grant from Tower Foundation
News & Insights
WHOI working to address ocean acidification; protect region’s vital shellfish industry
Putting a value on green infrastructure to protect coastal communities
Untangling Impacts on Right Whales
WHOI in the News
Nearly a year after ‘catastrophic’ cliff walk collapse, Newport hopes to rebuild path where it is
Beach Erosion In Falmouth: Who’s At The Wheel?
Researchers Mapping Quick Changing Katama Bay
Sinking Atlantic Coastline Meets Rapidly Rising Seas
Sober warnings on Cape erosion
Oak Bluffs selectmen award North Bluff contract for the final time
Features
Groundwater is water that exists underground in the spaces between grains of sand or gravel or in the cracks and…
Rivers, estuaries, and deltas are key to understanding the chemical structure of seawater, and are home to some of the…
What you need to do We are looking for samples from most large rivers close to the ocean. If you…
Related Links
Coastal Systems Group
Scientific insight into real-world problems such as rising sea level, storm activity, and climate change
PVLab
Understanding and modelling waves, currents, and sand movement in the nearshore, surf, and swash.
Where Land & Sea Meet : Managing Shoreline Change Over the Next 100 Years
How fast could sea level rise? How would rising sea level affect our coastline? These questions, and many others, were the subject of this Morss Colloquium.