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Shoreline variability via empirical orthogonal function analysis: Part I temporal and spatial characteristics
Authors:Jon K Miller  Robert G Dean
Institution:1. Davidson Laboratory, Stevens Institute of Technology, Castle Point on Hudson, Hoboken, NJ 07030, United States;2. Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida, P.O. Box 116590, Gainesville, FL 32611–6590, United States
Abstract:Empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) or principal components were used to extract the significant modes of shoreline variability from several data sets collected at three very different locations. Although EOFs have proven to be a valuable tool in the analysis of nearshore data, most applications have focused on the ability of the technique to describe cross-shore or profile variability. Here however, EOFs were used to help identify the dominant modes of longshore shoreline variability at Duck, North Carolina, the Gold Coast, Australia, and at several locations within the Columbia River Littoral Cell in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. In part one of this analysis, characteristic patterns of shoreline variability identified by the EOF analysis are described in detail. At each site, the dominant modes consisting of the first four eigenfunctions were found to describe nearly 95% of the total shoreline variability. At both Duck and the Gold Coast, several interesting longshore periodic features suggestive of sand waves were identified, while boundary effects related to natural headlands and navigational structures/entrances dominated the Pacific Northwest data sets.
Keywords:Longshore variability  Empirical orthogonal functions  Principal component analysis  Duck  The Gold Coast  Columbia River  Shoreline variability
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