Storm surge, ocean wave, and weather remodeling of coastal sandy beach in the eastern Bering Sea. 2009-2010. Smolen, M. J., S. Johnson, and R. Tuluk
收藏DataCite Commons2025-09-22 更新2026-01-12 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/10.24431/ax1k9ny9gb
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Climate change is expected to alter weather patterns leading to changes in the paths
and frequency of storms in the Bering Sea. Such changes are reflected in the observations
by people in Native villages along the coast that these storms are now more frequent, of
greater magnitude, and extend the usual storm season. This research is a direct result of
the concern by Hooper Bay and Paimiut about erosion and flooding and they identify this as
a primary concern for the welfare of their community. This research estimates the effects
of ocean waves and weather driven storm surge events on erosion and accretion processes on
the sandy beaches and Nuok Spit that protects Hooper Bay. The 2009 profiles, with three replicates,
of sections of beach indicate that the beaches grew in height in the upper reaches of the beach
when compared to 2010 profiles. The growth is believed to be from wind blown sand from the splash
zone to the bluffs. Overall erosion was not documented in the interval from late July to early August
2009 to 2010. These datasets were archived as part of the North Pacific Research Board legacy project recovery effort undertaken by Axiom Data Science and NPRB in 2025. The goal of the recovery effort was to assess the NPRB-funded data projects from 2002 to 2014 and archive final data packages that were ready for publication to increase long-term accessibility and discoverability. Data packages were archived as is given limited funding and resources.
提供机构:
Axiom Data Science
创建时间:
2025-09-12



