In the Science Times section of Tuesday's NY Times, there is an excellent in-depth article on beach erosion entitled, "Next Victim of Warming: The Beaches." A number of subjects are discussed, including seawalls. Here's a quote from the article:
"Maintaining eroding beaches with artificial infusions of sand is difficult and costly, and as sea levels rise, it may become economically impractical or even impossible. "The combination of sea walls and rising sea level will accelerate the rate of land loss in front of those sea walls," said Peter Howd, an oceanographer who conducts shoreline research for the U.S. Geological Survey in St. Petersburg. "So people with a sea wall and a beach in front of it will end up with just a sea wall. In time, rising water meets the wall and drowns the beach. Meanwhile, storm waves scour the wall's base and erode the underwater beach slope. Eventually the sea wall collapses because the situation is so extreme."
We are exacerbating the problem of beach erosion with sea walls as we armor our beautiful beaches. Not to mention the adverse impacts to diverse sea life. I have a mental image of a sea turtle trying to get ashore to lay eggs, along a line of these sea walls...not pretty. If you've ever watched a turtle's forward locomotion, you know that going around is not their best thing. Then there is the subject of our seabirds.
"Maintaining eroding beaches with artificial infusions of sand is difficult and costly, and as sea levels rise, it may become economically impractical or even impossible. "The combination of sea walls and rising sea level will accelerate the rate of land loss in front of those sea walls," said Peter Howd, an oceanographer who conducts shoreline research for the U.S. Geological Survey in St. Petersburg. "So people with a sea wall and a beach in front of it will end up with just a sea wall. In time, rising water meets the wall and drowns the beach. Meanwhile, storm waves scour the wall's base and erode the underwater beach slope. Eventually the sea wall collapses because the situation is so extreme."
We are exacerbating the problem of beach erosion with sea walls as we armor our beautiful beaches. Not to mention the adverse impacts to diverse sea life. I have a mental image of a sea turtle trying to get ashore to lay eggs, along a line of these sea walls...not pretty. If you've ever watched a turtle's forward locomotion, you know that going around is not their best thing. Then there is the subject of our seabirds.
