Coastline changes: A reconsideration of the prevalence of recession on sandy shorelines

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2025-08-14Department
Ciencias de la TierraSource
Woodroffe CD, Evelpidou N, Delgado-Fernandez I, Green D, Sengupta D, Karkani A and Ciavola P (2025). Coastline changes: A reconsideration of the prevalence of recession on sandy shorelines. Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures, 3, e18, 1–13Abstract
It is often inferred that rising sea levels will result in widespread coastal recession. Erosion
appeared prevalent in a worldwide compilation of evidence derived from maps and aerial
photographs undertaken in the 1980s by the Commission on the Coastal Environment. Eric
Bird, chair of the commission, inferred that >70% of sandy coastlines had retreated, a generalisation that has been widely cited. We reconsider these findings in respect of subsequent
advances in shoreline mapping, including greater precision possible using geographical information systems and more frequent remote sensing imagery with increased spatial, spectral and
temporal resolution. Satellite-derived shorelines now enable broad global and regional generalisations about shoreline position. Beaches fluctuate over a range of timescales, meaning that
trends in their position are highly dependent on techniques and temporal scales adopted for
monitoring. Recent global- and regional-scale shoreline assessments indicate that many sandy
shorelines have been stable, and that detectable retreat has occurred on fewer beaches than
previously inferred. Accretion is apparent on some coasts, particularly where engineering
interventions protect or have reclaimed land. There is considerable variability in the behaviour
of monitored beaches, and it is not yet possible to decipher a response to the gradual centimetrescale rise in sea level of recent decades. Instead, we re-emphasise the several other factors that
were considered to contribute to recession by the Commission, many of which relate to a change
in sediment budget. To provide insights into future coastline behaviour, a better understanding
of the multiple drivers on individual beaches is needed to discriminate between erosional events
and longer-term trends in shoreline position.
Subjects
coastal recession; coastal erosion; sea-level rise; shoreline change; satellite-derived shorelines; sediment budgetCollections
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