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5.8: The Last Beach?

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    31622
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    In their sobering book The Last Beach (2014), renowned coastal geologists Orrin Pilkey (b. 1934) and Andrew Cooper (b. 1962) spell out clearly the impacts of humans on beaches:

    The hands of humans are very clearly on the beaches of the world. Many of our actions are fairly benign—we swim, fish, sunbathe, stroll, or just enjoy the view, the sea breezes, and the smells of the sea. But we also dump trash and discharge our waste pipes onto beaches. We rake them to “clean them up,” drive on them, and mine them for minerals, gravel, and sand. We bulldoze them to make “dunes” to protect houses, pump or truck sand around the beach to “improve” it, and build walls and breakwaters of various types to block waves and hold the sand in place.

    Though progress has been made, many questions remain regarding the future of beaches and our efforts to maintain them for human and natural uses. As Vitousek and colleagues (2017) put it: “The science of the coastal zone is bursting at the seams with unanswered questions. . . . The future of the coastline will be what we engineer it to be.”


    This page titled 5.8: The Last Beach? is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.