Difference between revisions of "Coastal cell"

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Definition|title=Coastal cell
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Definition|title= Coastal cell (also called coastal sediment cell, sediment cell, littoral cell)
 
|definition= Coastal compartment within which sediment movement is self-contained.<ref name="CIRIA (1996)"> CIRIA (1996). ''Beach management manual''. CIRIA Report 153.</ref>.}}
 
|definition= Coastal compartment within which sediment movement is self-contained.<ref name="CIRIA (1996)"> CIRIA (1996). ''Beach management manual''. CIRIA Report 153.</ref>.}}
  
  
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===Notes===
 
A coastal cell contains a complete cycle of sedimentation including sources, transport paths, and sinks. The cell boundaries (often corresponding to headlands or jetties) delineate the geographical area within which the budget of sediment is balanced, providing the framework for the quantitative analysis of coastal erosion and accretion.  
 
A coastal cell contains a complete cycle of sedimentation including sources, transport paths, and sinks. The cell boundaries (often corresponding to headlands or jetties) delineate the geographical area within which the budget of sediment is balanced, providing the framework for the quantitative analysis of coastal erosion and accretion.  
  
Other terms for ''coastal cell'' are: ''coastal sediment cell'', ''sediment cell'', ''littoral cell''.
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===Related articles===
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:[[Sediment Budget]]
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:[[Shoreline management]]
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:[[Shoreline Management Plans, UK]]
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:[[EUROSION project]]
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:[[Littoral drift and shoreline modelling]]
  
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
==See also==
 
 
# [[Shore protection, coast protection and sea defence methods]]
 
# [[FUTURECOAST project, UK ]]
 

Latest revision as of 12:12, 25 February 2022

Definition of Coastal cell (also called coastal sediment cell, sediment cell, littoral cell):
Coastal compartment within which sediment movement is self-contained.[1].
This is the common definition for Coastal cell (also called coastal sediment cell, sediment cell, littoral cell), other definitions can be discussed in the article


Notes

A coastal cell contains a complete cycle of sedimentation including sources, transport paths, and sinks. The cell boundaries (often corresponding to headlands or jetties) delineate the geographical area within which the budget of sediment is balanced, providing the framework for the quantitative analysis of coastal erosion and accretion.


Related articles

Sediment Budget
Shoreline management
Shoreline Management Plans, UK
EUROSION project
Littoral drift and shoreline modelling


References

  1. CIRIA (1996). Beach management manual. CIRIA Report 153.