Not just a matter of scale: measurement and comparison of coastline lengths derived from WVS, Landsat and Corona datasets for representative coast sections of the Lena Delta

To calculate long-term coastal erosion rates in the Laptev Sea and subsequent sediment release to the Arctic Ocean, a precise assessment of shoreline length is necessary since current estimates rely on rough worldwide-available shoreline datasets. In addition coastlines are rarely divided into morph...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kruse, J. E., Lantuit, Hugues, Rachold, Volker
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/13119/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.23511
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Summary:To calculate long-term coastal erosion rates in the Laptev Sea and subsequent sediment release to the Arctic Ocean, a precise assessment of shoreline length is necessary since current estimates rely on rough worldwide-available shoreline datasets. In addition coastlines are rarely divided into morphometric subtypes to characterize their self-similarity. We therefore used World Vector Shoreline (WVS), Corona and Landsat datasets to measure, compare and characterize the length of four representative coast sections in the Lena Delta and at the Bykovsky Peninsula at different scales.The Bykovsky Peninsula lies NE of the town Tiksi and extends 40 km parallel to the mainland in NNW-SSE-direction. This 40 m high original surface, called Ice-Complex, has a very high volumetric ice content (i.e. 80%) and is subjected to thermal abrasion at the coast. At the Sardakh Channel mouth we find islands and peninsulas within accretional flood plains, 0-1m high and composed of silt, fine grained sand and peat with an ice content of 25-40% (Schirrmeister 2004). The NE coast of Arga Island is a sea dominated, erosional, 10m high coast composed of fine grained sands with low ice content (20-30%). About 100km of the Arga Island west coast is built up of a vast 10-20m high sand plain of the second terrace of the Lena Delta with a large number of deep thermokarst lakes. Submergence of these lakes has created an extremely embayed coast, divided from the sea by a 4-7km wide lagoon. The lagoon is separated from the sea by a chain of barrier islands (Pfeiffer et al. 2002).Coastlines were extracted from Landsat and Corona data digitising the shoreline between two distinct points of each section with constant length fragments (100 m) as described in previous studies (e.g. Mandelbrot, 1967). The lengths of these sections were then compared with those of the corresponding sections of the WVS, which was digitised from analogue maps at the scale of 1:250000 or smaller in the Russian Arctic (Soluri et al. 1990).As expected, the lengths of the ...