Littoral drift, or shore drift, is the process by which beach sediment is moved along the shoreline. Drift results primarily from the oblique approach of wind-generated waves and can therefore change in response to short-term (daily, weekly, or seasonally) shifts in wind direction. Over the long term, however, many shorelines exhibit a single direction of net shore drift. Net shore-drift is determined through geomorphologic analysis of beach sediment patterns and of coastal landforms. Many shorelines can be divided into discrete littoral, or drift, cells, which are independent of one another and for which distinct sediment sources and sinks can be identified. This coverage denotes the extent of individual littoral cells and the direction of net shore-drift within each.
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The Washington State Department of Ecology - view all
Update frequencyunknown
Last updated3 years ago
Overview014ECYOCNPacific NorthwestPacific OceanPuget SoundSEAShorelands and Environmental Assistance ProgramStrait of Juan de FucaWashington State Department of Ecologybeachcoastdrifterosiongeologyhydrographylittoralmarineoceanssandsedimentshorelinestatewater
Additional Information
KeyValue
Dcat Issued2023-04-13T17:13:19.000Z
Dcat Modified2023-04-13T17:57:03.000Z
Dcat Publisher NameWashington State Department of Ecology
Guidhttps://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=4dfad2833cc54474aa0a543b61748dcf
Harvest Object Idb428fb66-94bd-48c6-8b05-0dc22f775417
Harvest Source Id03016d16-b963-4f6a-99b0-8a37574f4576
Harvest Source TitleWashington Geospatial Open Data Portal
