Title | 1994 Proposed Coastal Barrier Resources System Maps [cartographic resource] : State of Oregon |
Publication Type | Report |
Year of Publication | 1994 |
Authors | United States. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Pagination | 31 p. |
Institution | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Region 1 |
City | Portland, Or. |
Call Number | OSU Libraries: Valley G1491.C6 U5 1994, Digital Open Access |
Keywords | Bayocean Peninsula, Clatsop Spit, coastal hazards, Coos Bay, Ecola Creek, Elk River, erosion, flooding, maps, Necanicum River estuary, Nehalem River estuary, Nestucca Bay, Nestucca Spit, Netarts Bay, Netarts Spit, New River, Salishan Spit, Salmon River Estuary, Sand Lake, Siletz Bay, Sixes River, Tillamook Bay, Umpqua River estuary, Yaquina Bay |
Notes | Coastal barriers are landforms that protect mainlands and aquatic habitats against the worst effects of coastal storms. Coastal barriers include estuaries, inlets, marshes, wetlands and nearshore waters and can include islands, sandspits, sandbars and broad beaches. The protective value of these landforms can be degraded by development. In 1994, a proposal was made to expand the Coastal Barrier Resources System to include the West Coast of the United States. These maps were drafted to show areas that should be protected. The proposed expansion, however, did not take place. Nevertheless, the maps have value in showing what should not be developed. |
URL | https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/defaults/6q182q79q |
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