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Development of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) for predicting the impact of storms on high-energy, active-margin coasts

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Title Development of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) for predicting the impact of storms on high-energy, active-margin coasts
Names Barnard, Patrick L. (creator)
van Ormondt, Maarten (creator)
Erikson, Li H. (creator)
Eshleman, Jodi (creator)
Hapke, Cheryl (creator)
Ruggiero, Peter (creator)
Adams, Peter N. (creator)
Foxgrover, Amy C. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-11 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article was published by Springer and is in the public domain. The published article can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/11069.
Abstract The Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) applies a predominantly
deterministic framework to make detailed predictions (meter scale) of storm-induced
coastal flooding, erosion, and cliff failures over large geographic scales (100s of kilometers).
CoSMoS was developed for hindcast studies, operational applications (i.e., nowcasts
and multiday forecasts), and future climate scenarios (i.e., sea-level rise + storms) to
provide emergency responders and coastal planners with critical storm hazards information
that may be used to increase public safety, mitigate physical damages, and more effectively
manage and allocate resources within complex coastal settings. The prototype system,
developed for the California coast, uses the global WAVEWATCH III wave model, the
TOPEX/Poseidon satellite altimetry-based global tide model, and atmospheric-forcing data
from either the US National Weather Service (operational mode) or Global Climate
Models (future climate mode), to determine regional wave and water-level boundary
conditions. These physical processes are dynamically downscaled using a series of nested Delft3D-WAVE (SWAN) and Delft3D-FLOW (FLOW) models and linked at the coast to
tightly spaced XBeach (eXtreme Beach) cross-shore profile models and a Bayesian
probabilistic cliff failure model. Hindcast testing demonstrates that, despite uncertainties in
preexisting beach morphology over the ~500 km alongshore extent of the pilot study area,
CoSMoS effectively identifies discrete sections of the coast (100s of meters) that are
vulnerable to coastal hazards under a range of current and future oceanographic forcing
conditions, and is therefore an effective tool for operational and future climate scenario
planning.
Genre Article
Topic Modeling
Identifier Barnard, P. L., van Ormondt, M., Erikson, L. H., Eshleman, J., Hapke, C., Ruggiero, P., ... & Foxgrover, A. C. (2014). Development of the Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) for predicting the impact of storms on high-energy, active-margin coasts. Natural Hazards, 74(2), 1095-1125. doi:10.1007/s11069-014-1236-y

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