You are here: Home

Search results

69 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Project ECMAScript program Beach and Tidal Habitat Inventories
This series of reports, databases, and data layers generated using Google Earth imagery provides an inventory of sandy beach and tidal inlet habitats from Maine to North Carolina, as well as modifications to sandy beaches and tidal inlets prior to, immediately after, and three years after Hurricane Sandy.
Located in Projects / Beach and Tidal Inlet Habitat Inventories
File Beach response models
Rob Thieler (USGS)
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Physical and Geological Processes
Image Octet Stream Coast Guard beach, Eastham, MA
Back barrier beach and dune
Located in Topics / Beach Resiliency / Photos and Images
File ECMAScript program Coastal and adjacent data layers from Designing Sustainable Landscapes
Joanna Grand (UMass Amherst)
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Mapping and Spatial Data (also Intro. slides)
File Coastal Resilience.org
Whelchel (TNC)
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Delivering Coastal Resiliency Information
File Coastal wetland dynamics and wildlife populations
Allan O'Connell (USGS)
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Tidal Marsh Obligate Species
File C source code Coupled Marsh Equilibrium Model and hydrodynamic model (ADCIRC)
Jim Morris (University of South Carolina)
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Tidal Marsh Biological Response to Sea Level Rise and Storms
This link allows users to select the metrics that are most important to their objectives in choosing where to conduct field surveys of road-stream crossings to assess aquatic organism passage for particular groups of species, average slope at crossings, or for other considerations.
Located in Topics / Aquatic Resiliency and Connectivity / Maps
This tool allows users to view aquatic barriers (dams, road-stream crossings) by the relative gain in ecological value if they were removed. Users start with a consensus map of anadromous fish priorities, which was developed based on stakeholder input as part of the North Atlantic Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative (NAACC). Beyond the consensus results, interested users can create their own scenarios by filtering input barriers to limit the analysis to a given state or watershed, changing the weights of metrics according to their importance to the analysis objectives (e.g. length of upstream network connected, number of diadromous fish present, etc.) and by modeling the removal of up to 10 barriers.
Located in Topics / Aquatic Resiliency and Connectivity / Maps
File text/texmacs Department of the Interior Hurricane Sandy Resilience Projects
Project titles, locations, agencies and descriptions
Located in Topics / / Workshop December 8-9 2014 / Related documents