A multiscale climate emulator for long-term morphodynamics (MUSCLE-morpho)

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

José A. Á. Antolinez (Universidad de Cantabria)

Fernando J. Méndez (Universidad de Cantabria)

Paula Camus (Universidad de Cantabria)

Sean Vitousek (North Central Climate Science Centre)

Mauricio González (Universidad de Cantabria)

P. Ruggiero (Oregon State University)

Patrick L. Barnard (North Central Climate Science Centre)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JC011107
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
1
Volume number
121
Pages (from-to)
775-791

Abstract

Interest in understanding long-term coastal morphodynamics has recently increased as climate change impacts become perceptible and accelerated. Multiscale, behavior-oriented and process-based models, or hybrids of the two, are typically applied with deterministic approaches which require considerable computational effort. In order to reduce the computational cost of modeling large spatial and temporal scales, input reduction and morphological acceleration techniques have been developed. Here we introduce a general framework for reducing dimensionality of wave-driver inputs to morphodynamic models. The proposed framework seeks to account for dependencies with global atmospheric circulation fields and deals simultaneously with seasonality, interannual variability, long-term trends, and autocorrelation of wave height, wave period, and wave direction. The model is also able to reproduce future wave climate time series accounting for possible changes in the global climate system. An application of long-term shoreline evolution is presented by comparing the performance of the real and the simulated wave climate using a one-line model.

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