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1 March 2002 Co-Measurement of Beaches in Maine, USA: Volunteer Profiling of Beaches and Annual Meetings
Heather Heinze Hill, Joseph T. Kelley, Daniel F. Belknap, Stephen M. Dickson
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Abstract

Maine's tourist beaches have experienced chronic erosion for a long time. Efforts by scientists and government planners to regulate development have run into conflict with property owners. To reconcile the two groups, a beach profiling project was begun to better understand the behavior of beaches as well as to bring the regulators and regulated together. Early results have demonstrated that southwest storms lead to beach accretion; northeast storms lead to erosion. A web site and an annual meeting where the data are presented have each proven very popular. This program of involving volunteers to gather otherwise-hard-to-collect data has been very successful and would work in many other locations.

Co-Measurement of Beaches in Maine, USA: Volunteer Profiling of Beaches and Annual Meetings
©Coastal Education and Research Foundation, Inc. 2002
Heather Heinze Hill, Joseph T. Kelley, Daniel F. Belknap, and Stephen M. Dickson "Co-Measurement of Beaches in Maine, USA: Volunteer Profiling of Beaches and Annual Meetings," Journal of Coastal Research 36(sp1), 374-380, (1 March 2002). https://doi.org/10.2112/1551-5036-36.sp1.374
Published: 1 March 2002
KEYWORDS
beach volume
currents
New England
Storms
waves
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