Commentary: Firsthand Experience with Algal Bloom
This article is scary. The experience is one of life or death and the advice given is worth heeding.
Commentary: My firsthand experience with an algal bloom
CoastaleReview.org
This article is scary. The experience is one of life or death and the advice given is worth heeding.
Commentary: My firsthand experience with an algal bloom
CoastaleReview.org
In a year with very few tropical systems, Hurricane Four of 1913 received barely a notice by the Raleigh office of the Weather Bureau of the United States.
A shipwreck believed to be the George W. Wells is shown on Ocracoke Island after being exposed by waves produced by passing Hurricane Teddy in September 2020. Photo: Cape Lookout National Seashore
1913 storm thrashed ships, and a rescue led to accusations
CoastalReview.org
This dataset contains mapped boundaries of intertidal oyster reefs and washed shell deposits found along the SC coast. Reefs were mapped through a combination of automated and manual techniques using 4-band (blue, green, red, near-infrared) digital orthophotos with a theoretical ground resolution of 0.25 meters. These photos were taken from 2003-2006 and can be downloaded. The project area covered those sections of the SC coastal zone where oysters had historically been mapped by the SC Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) in the 1980’s. The area spans 122 USGS quarter quadrangles (DOQQs).
Sixty of the mapped DOQQs were ground-truthed by boat to assess accuracy. The initial mapping process met the overall minimum accuracy requirements of the project (80% correct classification) and was completed through a joint effort between Photo Science Inc. and SCDNR. Since 2006, low-altitude helicopter photography (see photo below) has been used to edit and update the initial data product. In 2016, 18.5% of the mapped oysters had been updated using helicopter photography. Edits and improvements to this data product are ongoing, and this dataset will be periodically updated.
A link is included below for a table that lists initial accuracy and editing status data by DOQQ. Accuracy scores listed were calculated for the initial product and do not reflect the results of low-altitude helicopter photography editing, so these scores should be considered to be the minimum level of accuracy for the edited areas. Areas covered and analyzed by low-altitude helicopter photographs can be considered to have the highest degree of accuracy. DOQQs that have not been edited by SCDNR should be used with caution. Due to variations in image quality and visibility of oysters, some localized areas may not be as accurate as reported values. In particular, some of the oyster flats with sparse or patchy oyster coverage were difficult to map. Instructions and links are provided below for access to the data and associated metadata.
SC Intertidal Oyster Reefs Map Application
SCDNR_Oyster2015.zip (33mb) ESRI ArcGIS v10.3 File Geodatabase
Layer Description: | Layer Names: | Layer Metadata: |
---|---|---|
SC Intertidal Oyster Reefs | Oyster2015Live | SCDNR_Oyster2015Live.html |
SC Oyster Shell Deposits | Oyster2015Wash | SCDNR_Oyster2015Wash.html |
Available data set is subject to change and will be updated periodically.
Metadata about the editing status: SCDNR_Oyster2015_metadata_table.pdf
DOQQQ imagery is available at the following link, DOQQQ Imagery
A screen shot submitted by Winston Fowler. Let’s hope we “turn the corner” on COVID soon!
A federal judge has thrown out the Trump administration’s rule that gutted water quality protections put in place during the Obama administration. The challenge of the Trump rule was brought by six Native American tribes, who were represented by Earthjustice.
The Trump WOTUS revision removed protections for 18% of streams and 51% of wetlands in the U.S.
Federal judge vacates Trump-era WOTUS rule replacement
CoastalReview.org
Photographer Charles Farrell captured how mullet fishermen in the fall of 1938 “made do,” as historian David Cecelski explains, on Bald Head Island during the Great Depression. Bald Head Island Marina is a CRUISERS NET SPONSOR!
Our Coast’s History: Varnamtown’s Fishermen 1938
CoastalReview.org
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Bald Head Island Marina
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Geographer Roger Payne has recently published his second reference guide to the names of places along the Outer Banks.
Geographer explains what’s in Outer Banks place names
CoastalReview.org
If you spot a stranded or entangled leatherback, loggerhead, green or Kemp’s ridley sea turtles, call the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Sea Turtle Stranding and Disentanglement Network for help at 866-755-6622.
Report stranded, entangled sea turtles to NOAA’s hotline
CoastalReview.org
Through Charles Farrell’s photographs of Sneads Ferry in the 1930s, historian David Cecelski learned the stories and people of Onslow County fishing village.
Our Coast’s History: Remembering 1930s Sneads Ferry
CoastalReview.org
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