Long-term impacts of sea-level changes and trends in storm magnitude and frequency along the Mediterranean coasts are key aspects of effective coastal adaptation strategies. In enclosed basins as a gulf, this requires a step beyond global and regional analysis toward high resolution modelling of hazards and vulnerabilities at different time scales. In this paper we present the compound future projection of static (sea level) and dynamic (wind-wave) impacts to the geomorphological evolution of a vulnerable sandy coastal plan located in the south Sardinia (west Mediterranean Sea). Based on local temporal trends in Hs (8 mm yr-1) and sea level (SLR of 5.4 mm yr-1), a 2-year return time flood scenario at 2100 shows the flattening of the submerged morphologies triggering the process of marine embayment. The research proposes adaptation strategies to be adopted to design the projected new coastal area under vulnerabilities at local and territorial scales.
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Subject: Engineering - Marine Engineering
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