Associate Professor Jim Peterson
4 points - 2.5 hours per week on average (two lectures and one lecture and one 2-hour practical in alternate weeks) - Second semester - Clayton - Prerequisites: A first-year sequence in geography, or permission of the head of department) - Prohibition: GES2160
Objectives To introduce students to the nature of environmental (in)stability on coasts and the application of coastal science to planning and management.
Synopsis Coastal changes since the end of the last glacial stage have been great and much interest centres on the nature of environmental stability and the relative role of catastrophic events, natural change and fluctuation, and of economic development in determining the pattern of geographical variation in coastal landform evolution. Studies of such topics lead to an assessment of the importance of an understanding of the nature of environmental stability to modern resources management in the coastal zone.
Assessment Written (1000 words): 33% - Examinations (2 hours): 33% - Practical work/fieldwork: 34%
Prescribed texts
One of the following:
Bird E C F Coasts 3rd edn, ANU Press, 1984
Viles H and Spencer T Coastal problems Edward Arnold, 1995