Coastal Engineering: Processes, Theory and Design Practice

Front Cover

Historically, much harm has been done by well-meaning coastal engineering attempts, which seemed like good ideas on paper but which failed to allow for practical issues. For this reason, it is vital that theories and models are well grounded in practice.

This second edition brings the models and examples of practice up to date. It has expanded coverage of tsunamis and generating energy from waves to focus both on the great dangers and the great opportunities that the ocean presents to the coastal zone. With an emphasis on practice and detailed modelling, this is a thorough introduction to all aspects of coastal processes, morphology, and design of coastal defences. It describes numerous case studies to illustrate the successful application of mathematical modelling to real-world practice.

A must-have book for engineering students looking to specialize in coastal engineering and management.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Wave theory
21
3 Design wave specification
73
4 Coastal water level variations
111
5 Coastal transport processes
166
analysis modelling and prediction
205
7 Design reliability and risk
263
8 Field measurements and physical models
318
9 Conceptual and detailed design
348
Appendix A Summary of statistical concepts and terminology
469
Appendix B Maximum likelihood estimation
475
Appendix C Harmonic analysis results
481
References
483
Index
506
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Dominic Reeve is Professor in the College of Engineering at the University of Swansea, UK and a Chartered Mathematician.

Andrew Chadwick is former Professor of Coastal Engineering at the University of the West Indies and Professor at Plymouth, UK.

Chris Fleming is a former Group Director of Halcrow, UK.

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