MONASH UNIVERSITY FACULTY HANDBOOKS

Science Handbook 1996

Published by Monash University
Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia

Authorised by Academic Registrar, April 1996


GES2150

Coastal geomorphology and management

Associate Professor Jim Peterson

4 points + 3 hours per week on average (2 lectures and 1 lecture and 3-hour practical in alternate weeks),+ Second semester + Clayton + Prerequisites: As for GES2130

Objectives On completion of this subject the student should have read the relevant texts and research literature and analysed some of them well enough to be able to frame documented arguments; be able to identify coastal landforms in the field on vertical air photographs and on topographic and thematic maps; be able to show how explanations for the origin of these landforms can be derived from analysis of relevant distribution patterns, morphologies, internal constitution, and evidence about the nature of weathering and pedogenesis; be able to identify the scope for dating the landforms and for applying this, and knowledge about landform origin and distribution, to landscape interpretation in terms of evolution, future development and the nature of environmental change; be able to apply knowledge derived from landform study to management problems, including mitigation of land degradation and the assembly of environmental impact statements; outline present and predictable challenges faced by coastal land managers; outline the nature of the regulatory environment in which CZM operates in Australia with special reference to Victoria.

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 (1500 words): 20% + Examinations (2 hours): 50% + Practical work/Fieldwork: 30%

Prescribed texts

Recommended texts


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