Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Will Rising Seas Scuttle Beach Development?

For the last quarter-century, through fair weather and foul, Duke geologist Orrin Pilkey has been warning that it's a bad idea to build on vulnerable barrier islands like North Carolina's Outer Banks.

Development pins the islands in place, rather than allowing them to move shoreward in response to rising sea levels, his many books and guest editorials have argued.

In his latest book, The Rising Sea (Aug. 2009, Island Press), Pilkey and fellow geologist Rob Young of Western Carolina University argue that the latest obvious evidence of sea level rise due to global warming has ended the debate. With a rise of at least three feet expected by many scientists by the year 2100 "there will be no more development on barrier islands unless they are heavily armored with seawalls on all sides," he says.

"Some states like Florida are in particularly bad shape because they have virtually hundreds of miles of high-rise-lined shorelines that can't be moved," he added. "Looking globally, the places that are most endangered are the river deltas of the world such as the Mississippi's, the Nile's (Egypt), the Niger's (Nigeria), the Ganges' (Bangladesh) and the Irawaddy's (Myanmar). On the Ganges delta 15 million people live below a three foot elevation.

"People living on coral atolls in the mid-Pacific and the equivalent Maldives in the Indian Ocean are already in trouble and starting to be moved." So too are Eskimos near the Arctic Circle in Alaska whose remote villages are no longer protected from waves by sea ice.

Rising sea levels will also affect big cities along the U.S. east coast from Boston to Miami, starting with subways and sewer systems, the book adds. Well inland in states with shallow sloping coastal plains, farmers will begin battling salt water intrusion in fields that no longer drain properly.

"Though numbers would vary highly from one spot to another, in some parts coastal North Carolina a one foot sea level rise could move the shoreline back two miles, and a three foot rise, six miles. And we should really plan for the possibility of twice that," Pilkey said.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Office Hours on the Web

David Goldstein of the Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy did a live one-hour web stream last week to discuss genetics, genomics, racial disparities and his latest work on Hepatitis C treatments.

He's an interesting guy, written up last year in a New York Times article which pointed out that he “does not shy away from unpopular positions or research.” He's also the author of a 2008 book Jacob’s Legacy: A Genetic View of Jewish History which describes the use of genetic tools to examine Jewish history and culture.

This is a new thing we're trying, called Online Office Hours, and it really turned into an interesting discussion.

You can watch it here: