NORCAL_BIASVALUES - Northern California Shoreline Bias Values

The USGS has produced a comprehensive database of digital vector shorelines by compiling shoreline positions from pre-existing historical shoreline databases and by generating historical and modern shoreline data. Shorelines are compiled by state and generally correspond to one of four time periods: 1800s, 1920s-1930s, 1970s, and 1998-2002. These shorelines were used to calculate long-term and short-term change rates in a GIS using the Digital Shoreline Analysis System (DSAS) version 3.0; An ArcGIS extension for calculating shoreline change: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1304, Thieler, E.R., Himmelstoss, E.A., Zichichi, J.L., and Miller, T.M. Shoreline vectors derived from historic sources (first three time periods) represent the high water line (HWL) at the time of the survey, whereas modern shorelines (final time period) represent the mean high water line (MHW). Changing the shoreline definition from a proxy-based physical feature that is uncontrolled in terms of an elevation datum (HWL) to a datum-based shoreline defined by an elevation contour (MHW) has important implications with regard to inferred changes in shoreline position and calculated rates of change. This proxy-datum offset is particularly important when averaging shoreline change rates alongshore. Since the proxy-datum offset is a bias, virtually always acting in the same direction, the error associated with the apparent shoreline change rate shift does not cancel during averaging and it is important to quantify the bias in order to account for the rate shift. The shoreline change rates presented in this report have been calculated by accounting for the proxy-datum bias.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
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identifier USGS:d231e94a-a150-4d88-8b40-bc2e8447b3f8
metadata_type geospatial
modified 20211025
old-spatial -124.408341, 38.230976, -122.967696, 41.997984
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
resource-type Dataset
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spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-124.408341, 38.230976], [-124.408341, 41.997984], [ -122.967696, 41.997984], [ -122.967696, 38.230976], [-124.408341, 38.230976]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • baseline
  • beach-erosion
  • beach-nourishment
  • bias
  • california
  • ckan
  • cmgp
  • coastal-and-marine-geology-program
  • coastal-processes
  • coastal-survey-map
  • continental-island-shore-complex
  • effects-of-coastal-change
  • endpoint-rate
  • environment
  • erosion
  • esri-polyline-shapefile
  • geo
  • geoscientificinformation
  • geoss
  • historic-shoreline
  • lidar
  • linear-regression-rate
  • national
  • north-america
  • northern-california-ecoregion
  • oceans
  • offset
  • shoreline
  • shoreline-accretion
  • shoreline-change-rate
  • shoreline-erosion
  • t-sheet
  • tp-sheet
  • u-s-geological-survey
  • united-states
  • usgs
  • usgs-d231e94a-a150-4d88-8b40-bc2e8447b3f8
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer PCMSC Science Data Coordinator
maintainer_email pcmsc_data@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T07:52:33.936953
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T07:52:33.936956
notes The USGS has produced a comprehensive database of digital vector shorelines by compiling shoreline positions from pre-existing historical shoreline databases and by generating historical and modern shoreline data. Shorelines are compiled by state and generally correspond to one of four time periods: 1800s, 1920s-1930s, 1970s, and 1998-2002. These shorelines were used to calculate long-term and short-term change rates in a GIS using the Digital Shoreline Analysis System (DSAS) version 3.0; An ArcGIS extension for calculating shoreline change: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1304, Thieler, E.R., Himmelstoss, E.A., Zichichi, J.L., and Miller, T.M. Shoreline vectors derived from historic sources (first three time periods) represent the high water line (HWL) at the time of the survey, whereas modern shorelines (final time period) represent the mean high water line (MHW). Changing the shoreline definition from a proxy-based physical feature that is uncontrolled in terms of an elevation datum (HWL) to a datum-based shoreline defined by an elevation contour (MHW) has important implications with regard to inferred changes in shoreline position and calculated rates of change. This proxy-datum offset is particularly important when averaging shoreline change rates alongshore. Since the proxy-datum offset is a bias, virtually always acting in the same direction, the error associated with the apparent shoreline change rate shift does not cancel during averaging and it is important to quantify the bias in order to account for the rate shift. The shoreline change rates presented in this report have been calculated by accounting for the proxy-datum bias.
num_resources 2
num_tags 39
title NORCAL_BIASVALUES - Northern California Shoreline Bias Values