{"id":21882,"date":"2016-06-30T09:28:01","date_gmt":"2016-06-30T13:28:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/?p=7993"},"modified":"2024-05-21T15:54:13","modified_gmt":"2024-05-21T19:54:13","slug":"sentinels-of-the-centennial","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/sentinels-of-the-centennial\/","title":{"rendered":"Sentinels of the Centennial"},"content":{"rendered":"
Story and Images by Michael Flynn<\/strong><\/p>\n Posted June 30, 2016<\/em> In fact, one park already has the candles lit \u2014 three giant candles so big you need many stairs to get to the top. These candles, also known as the Sentinels of the Sea, are found on Cape Hatteras National Seashore<\/a>, where the land meets the sea.<\/p>\n The Cape Hatteras Lighthouse<\/a> on the central coast, Bodie Island Lighthouse<\/a> to the north and Ocracoke Lighthouse<\/a> to the south served as the primary aids to navigation during the 19th century and much of the 20th century before the advent of depth sounders and Global Positioning Systems. The lighthouses warned mariners of the hazardous shoals lying off the coast of Cape Hatteras and guided them to safe harbor through Oregon and Ocracoke inlets.<\/p>\n Although 21st-century sailors do not rely on these beacons with the same dependence as those of the past, the lighthouses still serve as active navigation aids. They also draw millions of visitors<\/a> to our country\u2019s first National Seashore each year.<\/p>\n The Cape Hatteras National Seashore, located along the Outer Banks, was established in 1937 to preserve cultural and natural resources of national significance. It is \u201ca place to engage your senses,\u201d says the seashore\u2019s homepage. \u201cShaped by the forces of water, wind, and storms these islands are ever changing. The plants, wildlife, and people who live here adapt continually.\u201d<\/p>\n Structures erected on dynamic barrier islands often do not have the same luxury of mobility. These islands\u2019 shifting shorelines are predominately shaped by erosion, frequently experience flooding from storm surge caused by tropical and other storm events (e.g., nor\u2019easters), and are highly vulnerable to sea-level rise.<\/p>\n You may recall efforts<\/a> in 1999 to relocate the Cape Hatteras Light Station to its current location: 2,900 feet landward from where it was originally constructed and had been operating since 1870.<\/p>\n The NPS recognized the vulnerability of historic structures located within the seashore and sought to assess the park\u2019s vulnerability to coastal hazards to assist park managers with long-term planning. It formed a cooperative agreement with East Carolina University to conduct this study.<\/p>\n My advisor, Dr. Tom Allen, is one of the principal investigators, which is how I found myself visiting these parks in the spring. Using GIS, I evaluated the susceptibility of historical structures located within the seashore to erosion, storm surge and sea-level rise.<\/p>\n My 2016 N.C. Coastal Resources Law, Planning and Policy Center fellowship enabled me to extend this study to examine the susceptibility of individual buildings located within the eight unincorporated communities along the Cape Hatteras Seashore to coastal hazards.<\/p>\n Natural processes change the shape and form of the barrier islands in the national seashore, which influences the plants and animals that inhabit them. These same natural processes also affect how people settled on and developed the sandy shores of the Outer Banks over the past century. When these natural processes interfere with or disrupt people\u2019s use of the natural environment, or even destroy the human-built environment, they become natural hazards.<\/p>\n For the NPS, I developed maps that illustrate how potential storm-surge inundation along the seashore, caused by increasingly powerful hurricanes, would be compounded by sea-level rise. The maps identify which landmarks and areas within the seashore are vulnerable to storm surge.<\/p>\n The maps are developed using the most recent data and methods available \u2014 Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR)<\/a> data from the U.S. Geological Survey for the North Carolina Flood Plain Management Program; storm surge inundation data from the Sea, Lake, and Overland Surges from Hurricanes (SLOSH)<\/a> model developed by the National Weather Service; and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Coastal Inundation Mapping methodology.<\/p>\n I am still developing the final report for the NPS. The ECU\/NPS study will provide park managers with vulnerability assessments for each structure, as well as estimated timelines and probabilities for potential impacts. The managers could use the information to identify mitigation measures that might reduce the vulnerability of a particular structure, as well as when the mitigation measure will need to be included in a future budget.<\/p>\n
\nSummer is officially here. If you are still making summer plans, mark your calendars for Aug. 25 and celebrate the centennial<\/a> of the National Park Service, or NPS. North Carolina boasts 10 national parks<\/a>. But you do not have to wait until August to find your park<\/a> and celebrate because July is Parks and Recreation Month.<\/p>\n<\/a>