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1 June 2012 Gulf of Mexico Regional Sediment Budget
Andrew Morang, Jeffrey P. Waters, Syed M. Khalil
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Abstract

Development of dynamic regional sediment management (RSM) plans is needed for future planning, construction, and monitoring of wetland and barrier island restoration. Broadly speaking, RSM refers to the optimum use of various sediment resources (littoral, estuarine, and riverine) in an environmentally effective and economically feasible manner. Coordination of the supply and demand sides of sand resources in a comprehensive manner will be required as project planning develops and evolves. The sediment budget is a planning tool that provides an accounting of sediment sources, sinks, and pathways as well as engineering activities and sediment budgets have generally been characterized as conceptual, interim, and operational depending upon the quality of the data, the level of analysis, and the uncertainty associated with the volume fluxes in the sediment budget. This paper summarizes existing sediment budget data for the entire Northern Gulf of Mexico. The purpose of this work has been to compile available sediment budget data into a common geographic information system–based data management framework in order to address various sediment management issues related to restoration around the Gulf of Mexico. The regional sediment budget is comprehensive and current through year end 2008. Within the coastal management community, there is an increasing awareness of the importance of reliable sediment budgets to inform sediment management decisions. However more work is needed to refine the sediment budget and provide its appropriate place in coastal management decisions.

Andrew Morang, Jeffrey P. Waters, and Syed M. Khalil "Gulf of Mexico Regional Sediment Budget," Journal of Coastal Research 60(sp1), 14-29, (1 June 2012). https://doi.org/10.2112/SI_60_3
Received: 6 February 2012; Published: 1 June 2012
KEYWORDS
Planning tools
Sediment budget
sediment management
sediment pathways
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