University of Wollongong
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Evaluating five shoreline change models against 40 years of field survey data at an embayed sandy beach

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posted on 2025-07-28, 01:35 authored by Oxana Repina, Rafael C Carvalho, Giovanni Coco, Jose AA Antolinez, Inaki de Santiago, Mitchell D Harley, Camilo Jaramillo, Kristen D Splinter, Sean Vitousek, Colin WoodroffeColin Woodroffe
Robust and reliable models are needed to understand how coastlines will evolve over the coming decades, driven by both natural variability and climate change. This study evaluated how accurately five popular ‘reduced-complexity’ models replicate multi-decadal shoreline change at Narrabeen-Collaroy Beach, a sandy embayment in Sydney, Australia. Measured shoreline positions derived from approximately monthly field surveys were used for 20-year calibration and 20-year validation periods. The models performed similarly on average but with large variability between transects. The set-up of several models was modified to compensate for their sensitivity to imperfect input wave data, and further site-specific improvements were identified. Capturing interannual to decadal-scale variability in cross-shore and longshore dynamics at this site was challenging for all five models. Models appeared to aggregate key processes at this timescale into parameter values rather than representing them directly. This suggests time-varying parameters or changes to model structure may be necessary for decadal-scale simulations.<p></p>

Funding

ARC Future Fellowship | FT220100009

History

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    ISSN - Is published in 0378-3839 (Coastal Engineering)
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    EISSN - Is published in 1872-7379 (Coastal Engineering)

Journal title

COASTAL ENGINEERING

Volume

199

Article/chapter number

ARTN 104738

Total pages

24

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English

Associated Identifiers

grant.12984034 (dimensions-grant-id); grant.13030144 (dimensions-grant-id)