Coastal geography
Coastal geography is the branch of physical geography and geomorphology that investigates the configuration, evolution, and dynamics of landforms and sediments at the interface between continents and oceans, where terrestrial and marine processes interact to shape the shoreline.[1][2]
This field emphasizes empirical observations of hydrodynamic forces—primarily waves, tides, and currents—that drive erosion, transportation, and deposition of sediments, resulting in distinctive features such as wave-cut cliffs, beaches, spits, and barrier islands.[3][4]
The balance between these erosional and depositional mechanisms is modulated by substrate geology, sediment availability, tidal range, and relative sea-level fluctuations, often leading to either retreating or advancing coastlines over geological timescales.[5][6]
Coastal zones, extending from high-tide limits inland to the edge of the continental shelf offshore, host critical ecosystems and dense human populations, rendering them susceptible to modifications from natural variability and engineering interventions that alter sediment budgets.[7][8]