Up to 70% of California beaches could disappear by end of the century
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California is known for golden sands and endless waves, but much of the states famous shoreline could vanish in the future. Thats according to a new study, which found that between 25% and 70% of California beaches might be washed away by the end of the century, leaving only cliffs or coastal infrastructure in their wake.
The study used satellite data collected over the past two decades to examine Californias 1,100-mile-long coast. Researchers from the US Geological Survey (USGS) used those satellite images, combined with models of climate crisis-driven sea level rise ranging from 1.6 to 10ft, to estimate the shape and position of the states coastline by 2100. The amount of sea level rise will depend on how much carbon is pumped into the atmosphere now and in the future.
The paper, which is in the process of being peer-reviewed for publication, follows on from a 2017 study conducted by the same researchers focused on the rate of coastal erosion in southern California. That study found a similar fraction of southern California beaches between 31 and 67% were susceptible to vanishing.
Beaches are perhaps the most iconic feature of California, and the potential for losing this identity is real, wrote Sean Vitousek, the researcher who led both the 2017 study and the current one. Losing the protecting swath of beach sand between us and the pounding surf exposes critical infrastructure, businesses and homes to damage. Beaches are natural resources, and it is likely that human-management efforts must increase in order to preserve them.
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/27/california-beaches-erosion-2100-study

SunSeeker
(55,672 posts)Then most of it comes back with another storm. It is really stunning how much a beach chances from month to month here in Southern California.
One thing is for certain, the sandy beaches have definitely gotten narrower over the last 50 years that I've lived here.
PSPS
(14,514 posts)Maybe they're being intentionally vague to imply the year 2100. The fact is that the predictions of reaching "tipping points" in 2100 were, shortly thereafter, changed to 2050. But just a week or so ago, it was admitted that these irreversible tipping points will be reached within the next 3 or 4 years.
TeamProg
(6,630 posts)freshwater rivers and spoiling agricultural land in the Breadbasket of America.
This author is worried about not being able to spend a day at the beach?
So many places will be underwater its mind blowing.