Inlet Database: Difference between revisions
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The inlets contained within the Federal Inlets Database include those with one, two, or no jetties, are located along all coasts of the United States, and are of different sizes. Examples of the inlet conditions and locations include: | The inlets contained within the Federal Inlets Database include those with one, two, or no jetties, are located along all coasts of the United States, and are of different sizes. Examples of the inlet conditions and locations include: | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig1.png|thumb|left| | [[Image:IDB_Fig1.png|thumb|left|400px|Figure 1. Siuslaw River Entrance, OR (large).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig2.png|thumb|right| | [[Image:IDB_Fig2.png|thumb|right|400px|Figure 2. Venice Inlet, FL (small).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig3.png|thumb|left| | [[Image:IDB_Fig3.png|thumb|left|400px|Figure 3. Government Cut, FL (jettied).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig4.png|thumb|right| | [[Image:IDB_Fig4.png|thumb|right|400px|Figure 4. Pensacola Bay Entrance, FL (no jetty).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig5.png|thumb|left| | [[Image:IDB_Fig5.png|thumb|left|400px|Figure 5. Moriches Inlet, NY (Atlantic).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig6.png|thumb|right| | [[Image:IDB_Fig6.png|thumb|right|400px|Figure 6. San Francisco Bay, CA (Pacific).]] | ||
[[Image:IDB_Fig7.png|thumb|center| | [[Image:IDB_Fig7.png|thumb|center|400px|Figure 7. Colorado River mouth, TX (Gulf Coast).]] | ||
[[IDB_Parameters_&_Statistics | Parameters & Statistics]] | |||
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Revision as of 14:05, 1 July 2011
Under Construction
Introduction
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Coastal Inlets Research Program (CIRP) Federal Inlets database consolidates inlet characteristics and statistics in a conveniently accessible web-based form. The Federal Inlets Database contains information compiled for 156 Federally maintained inlets and entrances in the continental United States and Alaska. For the CIRP mission, an inlet or entrance is defined as a maintained channel connecting an ocean or lake to a smaller water body and which experiences long-period water motion by tide or seiching, together with a wave-induced longshore current. Inlet channels contribute to economic vitality as commercial navigational waterways, are part of the military infrastructure of the nation, and are key components of the estuarine ecosystem. The Corps maintains inlet navigability by dredging channels and through implementation and maintenance of controlling structures. Understanding the physical processes occurring at these inlets and entrances is required for predicting the evolution of the inlet and adjacent beaches, both under natural conditions and in response to engineering activities such as routine channel maintenance, channel deepening, and mining of ebb- and flood-tidal shoals.
The Federal Inlets Database presented here is in a developmental stage. A primary goal of the development of the database is to identify information gaps. The collection of additional data is necessary to fully populate the existing database. The Federal Inlets Database must ultimately function as a continually evolving information center to maintain accuracy with the recognition that inlet characteristics change through time. The Federal Inlets Database was organized with the goal of providing information on hydraulic, geomorphic, and geometric parameters for Federally maintained inlets within the continental United States and Alaska. Much of this information is not readily available at this time, and the CIRP is requesting assistance of those possessing additional information to complete the database.
Location
One motivation for the establishment of the Federal Inlets Database was to obtain information on many inlets over a diverse range of locations. Inlets within the United States have widely differing wave conditions, tidal prisms, magnitudes and directions of longshore sediment transport, structures, and physical geometries (as well as other parameters). The inlets contained within the database are located within 25 states and are maintained under the direction of 19 Corps Districts. The following is a listing of those managing District offices and the corresponding states containing inlets for which they are responsible.
• New England (NAE): Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut
• New York (NAN): New York, New Jersey
• Philadelphia (NAP): New Jersey, Delaware
• Baltimore (NAB): Maryland
• Norfolk (NAO): Virginia
• Wilmington (SAW): North Carolina
• Charleston (SAC): South Carolina
• Savannah (SAS): Georgia
• Jacksonville (SAJ): Florida
• Mobile (SAM): Florida, Alabama
• New Orleans (MVN): Louisiana
• Galveston (SWG): Texas
• Los Angeles (SPL): California
• San Francisco (SPN): California
• Portland (NWP): Oregon, Washington
• Seattle (NWS): Washington
• Alaska (POA): Alaska
• Hawaii (POH): Hawaii
• Buffalo (LRB): New York, Ohio
• Detroit (LRE): Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota
The inlets contained within the Federal Inlets Database include those with one, two, or no jetties, are located along all coasts of the United States, and are of different sizes. Examples of the inlet conditions and locations include:
Link to CIRP Website Inlet Database page: