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Large-scale coastal behaviour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Large-scale coastal behaviour is an attempt to model the morphodynamics of coastal change at time and space scales appropriate to management and prediction.[1][2] Temporally this is at the decade to century scale, spatially at the scale of tens of kilometers.[2] It was developed by de Vriend.

Modelling large-scale coastal behaviour involves some level of parameterisation rather than simply upscaling from process or downscaling from the geological scale. It attempts to recognise patterns occurring at these scales. Cowell and Thom (2005) recognise the need to admit uncertainty in large-scale coastal behaviour given incomplete process knowledge.

References

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  1. ^ Terwindt, J.H.J.; Battjes, J.A. (1991-05-20). "Research on Large-Scale Coastal Behaviour: The Dutch Coast: Paper No. 10". Coastal Engineering 1990. Delft, The Netherlands: American Society of Civil Engineers. pp. 1975–1983. doi:10.1061/9780872627765.151. ISBN 978-0-87262-776-5.
  2. ^ a b "Journal of Marine Science and Engineering". www.mdpi.com. Retrieved 2023-03-11.