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Beach foreshore slope for the West Coast of the United States (ver. 1.1, September 2024)

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2002-09-01
End Date
2011-07-30
Acquisition
2024-09-16

Citation

Farris, A.S., and Weber, K.M., 2024, Beach foreshore slope for the West Coast of the United States (ver. 1.1, September 2024): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P137S83C.

Summary

This data release contains foreshore slopes for primarily open-ocean sandy beaches along the west coast of the United States (California, Oregon and Washington). The slopes were calculated while extracting shoreline position from lidar point cloud data collected between 2002 and 2011. The shoreline positions have been previously published, but the slopes have not. A reference baseline was defined and then evenly-spaced cross-shore beach transects were created. Then all data points within 1 meter of each transect were associated with each transect. Next, it was determined which points were one the foreshore, and then a linear regression was fit through the foreshore points. Beach slope was defined as the slope of the regression. Finally, [...]

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Attached Files

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revision_history.txt 934 Bytes text/plain
slope_BrowseGraphic.png
“Small section of coast showing reference baseline and slope data”
thumbnail 5.35 MB image/png
slopeData_WestCoast.csv 7 MB text/csv
slopeData_WestCoast_Metadata.xml
Original FGDC Metadata

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35.61 KB application/fgdc+xml
Shapefile: slopeData_WestCoast_v1_1.zip
slopeData_WestCoast_v1_1.dbf 6.75 MB
slopeData_WestCoast_v1_1.prj 155 Bytes
slopeData_WestCoast_v1_1.shp 2.62 MB
slopeData_WestCoast_v1_1.shx 767.54 KB

Purpose

Beach slope is a critical metric for coastal hazards science and is also necessary for extracting shorelines from satellite imagery. Shorelines derived from satellite data must be tidally-corrected to a reference elevation using the slope of the beach. The beach slope data presented here will be beneficial for advancing our understanding of coastal processes and for quantifying and predicting shoreline change and storm impacts along the Pacific coast.

Additional Information

Shapefile Extension

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