Skip to content
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact

Tag: United States

These countries produce the most plastic pollution in our oceans – and they’re not the ones you might have guessed – the Independent

Beautiful Bali: Plastic bags, bottles and other trash entangled in spent fishing nets litter the Jimbaran beach on the island of Bali, Indonesia, 2014 (by Onny Carr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via Flickr).

Trillions of pieces of plastic are estimated to float in oceans around the world…

U.S. East Coast adopts ‘living shorelines’ approach to keep rising seas at bay – Mongabay

A shoreline stabilization mechanism being tested by Biogenics Solutions Consulting as part of a Go Virginia Funded project in Gloucester, Va. on May 3, 2024. (by Lathan Goumas | Virginia Sea Grant, public domain via Flickr).

Excerpt: Along the U.S. East Coast, communities are grappling with the dual destructive forces of rising sea levels and stronger storms pushed by climate change, resulting in effects ranging from ‘ghost forests’ of saltwater-killed coastal trees in the Carolinas, to inundations of New York City’s subway system. While the usual response has been to build […]

  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
Instagram Facebook Twitter

© 2010 – 2024 CoastalCare.org