The problem of estimating the probability of extreme sea-levels along a coastline has received little attention. Most of the existing analyses are univariate approaches that are applied independently to data from individual sites. We present a spatial extension of the methods that integrates informa
β¦ LIBER β¦
Estimating future sea level extremes under conditions of sea level rise
β Scribed by W.E. Bardsley; W.M. Mitchell; G.W. Lennon
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 470 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0378-3839
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Spatial modelling of extreme sea-levels
β
Mark J. Dixon; Jonathan A. Tawn; John M. Vassie
π
Article
π
1998
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 257 KB
Potential impacts of projected sea-level
β
MMPB Fuentes; CJ Limpus; M Hamann; J Dawson
π
Article
π
2010
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 306 KB
Editorialβgeomorphic response to sea-lev
β
Jonathan R. French; Thomas Spencer; Denise J. Reed
π
Article
π
1995
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 565 KB
Impact of sea level rise on aquifer syst
β
J. Sundaresan
π
Article
π
1993
π
Springer
β 270 KB
An assessment of current and future vuln
β
Kathleen L. McInnes; Ian Macadam; Graeme Hubbert; Julian O'Grady
π
Article
π
2011
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 398 KB
## Abstract Current climate 1βinβ100βyear storm tide heights along the coast of Victoria, southeast Australia were estimated by combining probabilities of storm surge and tide heights determined from hydrodynamic modelling. For this return period, levels lie between 1 and 2 m above mean sea level a
The response of coastal marshes to sea-l
β
Denise J. Reed
π
Article
π
1995
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 941 KB