Top Banner
Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment David M. Bush Risk Assessment GEOL 4093
54

Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Feb 22, 2016

Download

Documents

thora

Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment. David M. Bush Risk Assessment GEOL 4093. Island-scale mapping 1990’s. Originally done by hand on clear plastic overlays and tracing paper We didn’t know at the time that it was GIS Andy and R/V Bicycle Elevation Forest Cover. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

David M. BushRisk Assessment

GEOL 4093

Page 2: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 3: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 4: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 5: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 6: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Island-scale mapping 1990’s

• Originally done by hand on clear plastic overlays and tracing paper

• We didn’t know at the time that it was GIS• Andy and R/V Bicycle• Elevation• Forest Cover

Page 7: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Island-scale mapping1990’s

Page 8: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Island-scale mapping1990’s

• Analog GIS• Andy--R/V Bicycle• Elevation• Forest Cover

Page 9: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 10: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 11: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 12: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Florida Panhandle, after Opal (1995)

Page 13: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Pawleys Island, SC, after Hugo (1989)

Page 14: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

South of Cancun after Gilbert, 1988

Page 15: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

B ZoneA ZoneV Zone

Jekyll Island flood zones

Page 16: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

ForestNo Forest

Jekyll Island forest cover

Page 17: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Preliminary Risk Assessment

FLOOD ZONE VEGETATION RATING

V --- Extreme

A None or sparse High

A Dense shrub or forest Moderate

Above A None or sparse Moderate

Above A Dense shrub or forest Low

Page 18: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

WaterLow HazardModerate HazardHigh HazardExtreme Hazard

Jekyll Island preliminary hazard assessment

Page 19: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 20: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 21: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 22: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 23: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 24: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Mainland Mapping

V eg e ta tion Q 3 F lood D ata S .L .O .S .H .

F in a l R isk M ap

Tracy Rice developed this using fetch instead of SLOSH

Page 25: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 26: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 27: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 28: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 29: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 30: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Risk RatingParameter Extreme High Moderate Low

VegetationNone, sparse,

marsh,6

Scattered shrub,

4

Dense shrub,2

Maritime forest,

1

Q-3 Flood zones

VE and undes.,8

A and AE.6

X500,2

X,1

SLOSH Category 1-3,8

Category 4, 5, and upland,0

Ranges 16-22 11-15 5-10 0-4

Page 31: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 32: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Geo-indicators

• Elevation• Vegetation• Tidal range• Bluff configuration• Evidence of historical storm impacts• Type of structures

• Density of structures• Site relative to stream mouth• Soil and drainage• Other surrounding features

Page 33: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Geoindicators AssessmentGeneral Site Parameters

Geoindicators High Risk Moderate Risk Low Risk

Elevation < 3 m 3-6 m > 6 m

Tidal Range microtidal mesotidal macrotidal

Bluff Configuration

bare face, recent slump

vegetated face, ramp

well-vegetated ramp

Erosion rate rapidly eroding eroding stable or accreting

Evidence of storms

obvious possible none

Total Indicators Of High Risk Of Moderate Risk Of Low Risk

Page 34: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Camden County, GA Study Sites

Page 35: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

St. Marys, GA

Page 36: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Elliots Bluff, GA

Page 37: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 38: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment
Page 39: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Puerto Rico Coastal Hazards Maps

1. Shoreline-setting hazards (long-term problems)2. Marine hazards (short-term impacts of storms)3. Earthquake and slope hazards (ground shaking,

landslides, liquefaction)4. Riverine hazards (historical floods)5. Development hazards (high-density or dangerous

settings)6. Engineering hazards (stabilization, nourishment,

sand mining)

Page 40: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Methodology, conclusion

Each coastal stretch is designated a relative hazard rating based on the following:

E = Extreme—more than 4 identifiable hazards H = High—3 to 4 identifiable hazardsM = Moderate—at least 2 hazardsL = Low—1 or no hazard

Page 41: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Puerto Rico

Culebra

Vieques

Page 42: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

A portion of the Carolina, PR, Coastal Hazard Map.

Page 43: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

The portion of Coastal Hazard Map 1, San Juan.

Page 44: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Mitigation

• Engineering– Strengthen or move buildings– Armor the coast

• Land Use Planning– Limit or reduce development density– Can help implement new techniques such as

clustered housing– Easiest with new developments

Page 45: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Our Approach to Mitigation

• Coastal landform protection, restoration, augmentation

• Mostly low cost• Many things individuals can do• Environmentally sensitive• Considers geologic/oceanographic processes

Page 46: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

PAR For the Shore

• Preserve, Augment, Restore– Dunes (frontal and interior)– Coastal barriers of all types

• Mangroves• Shoals• River mouth bars• Maritime forest

– Add new sand to island

Page 47: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Pandora’s Island—Mitigation on the Beach

Page 48: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Pandora’s Island—Mitigation back from the beach

Page 49: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Pandora’s Island becomes Fantasy Island

Page 50: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Topographic Map of Study Area

Harrison County, Mississippi

Page 51: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

3.2 mile study area

Page 52: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

GIS - Map Stacking ExampleLand cover fromair photo

Flood zones

Land surface slope

Katrina damagelayer

Page 53: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Debris Line

Page 54: Methods of Coastal Hazards Assessment

Total Building Destruction