GK
George M. Kaminsky
8 records found
1
A dynamic revetment is a cobble-gravel berm constructed around the high tide wave runup limit. These structures mimic composite beaches, which consist of a lower foreshore of sand and a backshore berm constructed of gravel or cobbles, which stabilizes the upper beach and provides
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Swash-by-swash morphology change on a dynamic cobble berm revetment
High-resolution cross-shore measurements
Dynamic cobble berm revetments are a promising soft engineering technique capable of protecting sandy coastlines by armouring the sand and dissipating wave energy to protect the hinterland against wave attack. They also form composite beaches as they are essentially mimicking nat
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A submerged, low-relief nearshore berm was constructed in the Pacific Ocean near the mouth of the Columbia River, USA, using 216,000 m3 of sediment dredged from the adjacent navigation channel. The material dredged from the navigation channel was placed on the northern
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The effects of climate change and sea level rise, combined with overpopulation are leading to ever-increasing stress on coastal regions throughout the world. As a result, there is increased interest in sustainable and adaptable methods of coastal protection. Dynamic cobble berm r
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Ocean-basin-scale climate variability produces shifts in wave climates and water levels affecting the coastlines of the basin. Here we present a hybrid shoreline change—foredune erosion model (A COupled CrOss-shOre, loNg-shorE, and foreDune evolution model, COCOONED) intended to
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New Insights on Coastal Foredune Growth
The Relative Contributions of Marine and Aeolian Processes
Coastal foredune growth is typically associated with aeolian sediment transport processes, while foredune erosion is associated with destructive marine processes. New data sets collected at a high energy, dissipative beach suggest that total water levels in the collision regime c
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