Special Issue (SI) in Physical Geography: Sandy Coasts: Dynamics Through the First Quarter of the 21st Century

77 views
Skip to first unread message

Alex Smith

unread,
May 26, 2026, 10:10:38 AM (3 days ago) May 26
to coasta...@udel.edu
Dear colleagues,

I’m excited to share that the Special Issue (SI) in Physical Geography, ‘Sandy Coasts: Dynamics Through the First Quarter of the 21st Century,’ is now open for submissions.

Given the projections and uncertainties associated with global sea level rise and increase in high water level events, this issue will focus on how local to regional scale sandy coast dynamics have displayed a change (if any) over the past few decades. The goal is to provide a benchmark on coastal changes and forcings, and discussion on how current processes may be modified in the future.

Accepted papers will appear first on-line, and the deadline for submissions to the SI is December 2026.

I have provided a link and full description below. Please consider this outlet for your research and contact me if you have any questions, at: 


Best,
Alex Smith

Throughout the 21st century, an acceleration of global mean sea level (GMSL) rise and increase in extreme water level events are widely expected. These factors are likely to have a significant impact on nearshore, beach, dune, and back barrier dynamics globally due to their sensitivity to changes in water levels. At the regional scale, the mode and timing of change will be variably affected by patterns of relative sea level, storm activity, framework geology, and anthropogenic development or intervention that can alter alongshore and cross-shore sedimentation processes. Given the concentration of human population and socio-ecological resources along the world’s coastlines, and the longer-term uncertainties of coastal sustainability, it is critical to assess how sandy beach and dune systems are responding to a changing climate. The goal of this special edition is to provide an early benchmark of sandy coastal dynamics in the 21st century, through field, remote sensing, and model-based approaches, and prospectus on how process-form interactions may be modified during the coming decades.
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages