Storm protection and planning
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/1969.3/28736
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Browsing Storm protection and planning by Subject "beach nourishment"
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Item Beach Renourishment Projects & Associated Inlet Maintenance Dredging(Criser Troutman Tanner, 2015) U. S. Army Corps of EngineersItem Beach Replenishment: The National Solution?(American Society of Civil Engineers, 1987-05) Pilkey, Orrin H.; Clayton, Tonya D.Item Coastal Engineering and Oceanography Study for the Beach Nourishment Project Galveston, Texas(1992-12-03) Dr. Y. H. Wang, P. E.Item Concepts and Science for Coastal Erosion Management(Deltares, 2010) Marchand, M.Item The Corps of Engineers and Shore Protection(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Institute for Water Resources, 2003-05) Hillyer, Theodore M.Item Engineering Work to be Performed for the Beach Nourishment Project at the Galveston Seawall Boulevard(City of Galveston, Texas, 1992-11-14) Dr. Y. H. Wang, P. E.Item Hampton Beachfront and Storm Protection Management Plan(2011-04) Hicks, Gayle E.; Whitley, Fred; Francese, Rebecca S.; Hardaway, C. Scott, Jr.; Milligan, Donna A.; Savage, Melissa; Daniel, TomItem The Impacts of Sea-Level Rise on the California Coast(California Climate Change Center, 2009-05) Heberger, Matthew; Cooley, Heather; Herrera, Pablo; Gleick, Peter H.; Moore, EliItem Local Comprehensive Beach Management Plan(South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, 2008-04-08) City of Isle of Palms, South CarolinaItem Miami-Dade County Beach Erosion Control Master Plan(Miami-Dade County, 2010) Miami-Dade CountyItem Realistic Economic Benefits from Beach Nourishment(1988-09) Dean, Robert G.A method is presented and illustrated with examples to establish appropriate storm damage reduction and recreational benefits from beach nourishment projects. Unlike previous methods, benefits to project adjacent areas are recognized due to sand transport out of the project area and deposition on adjacent beaches. Assuming homogeneity along the shoreline, the character of storm damage reduction and recreational benefit relationships are such that sand transported from a project area and deposited on adjacent beaches always results in an increase rather than a reduction in benefits is the establishment of a proportional damage curve for upland structures as a function of beach width and storm return period.Item Reducing the Impacts of Coastal Hazards(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 1998) Ward, Sandy; Main, CatherineItem Review Plan For Periodic Maintenance Nourishment For Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina Coastal Storm Damage Reduction Project(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wilmington District, 2012-11-30) Baker, Steven AItem Technologies for Climate Change Adaptation(UNEP Risø Centre, 2010-11) Linham, Matthew M.; Nicholls, Robert J.