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🌋Physical Geology Unit 14 Review

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14.3 Coastal zone management and sea-level change

🌋Physical Geology
Unit 14 Review

14.3 Coastal zone management and sea-level change

Written by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated September 2025
Written by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated September 2025
🌋Physical Geology
Unit & Topic Study Guides

Coastal zones are vital ecosystems that require careful management. They protect marine habitats, support economies, and shield communities from natural hazards. Balancing preservation with development is crucial for sustainable coastal living.

Sea-level rise poses significant threats to coastal areas, causing erosion, saltwater intrusion, and ecosystem changes. Adapting to these challenges involves innovative engineering, improved urban planning, and international cooperation to create resilient coastal communities.

Coastal Zone Management

Importance of coastal zone management

  • Preservation of ecosystems protects marine habitats and conserves biodiversity (coral reefs, mangroves)
  • Economic significance supports tourism industry and ensures fisheries sustainability
  • Community protection mitigates natural hazards and reduces flood risk (hurricanes, tsunamis)
  • Cultural heritage preservation safeguards indigenous coastal communities and historical coastal sites (ancient port cities)
  • Sustainable development balances land use planning and allocates resources efficiently

Coastal management strategies

  • Hard engineering approaches
    • Seawalls dissipate wave energy using vertical concrete structures
    • Groynes promote sediment accumulation with perpendicular structures to shoreline
    • Breakwaters reduce wave energy using offshore structures
  • Soft engineering approaches
    • Beach nourishment restores natural shoreline by replenishing sand
    • Dune rehabilitation traps sand by planting native vegetation
    • Managed retreat creates buffer zones through planned relocation of infrastructure
  • Integrated approaches combine hard and soft strategies with adaptive management techniques

Sea-Level Change and Coastal Impacts

Sea-level rise impacts

  • Coastal erosion accelerates shoreline retreat and causes loss of land area
  • Saltwater intrusion contaminates freshwater aquifers and degrades agricultural land
  • Ecosystem changes lead to wetland migration or loss and coral reef submergence
  • Infrastructure damage floods coastal structures and disrupts transportation networks
  • Socioeconomic impacts displace coastal communities and cause economic losses (tourism, fisheries)
  • Increased storm surge risk results in higher flood levels and more frequent inundation of low-lying areas

Adapting to sea-level change

  • Challenges
    1. Financial constraints limit adaptation measures due to high costs
    2. Uncertainty in sea-level rise projections complicates long-term planning
    3. Conflicting interests arise when balancing development and conservation
  • Opportunities
    • Innovation in coastal engineering develops new protection technologies (floating cities, artificial reefs)
    • Improved urban planning designs climate-resilient infrastructure
    • International cooperation facilitates knowledge sharing between coastal nations
    • Economic diversification shifts towards climate-adaptive industries (renewable energy, sustainable aquaculture)
  • Adaptation strategies
    • Early warning systems improve disaster preparedness and reduce vulnerability to extreme events
    • Policy and regulatory frameworks implement coastal zoning laws and integrate climate change into planning