Coastlab2020
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South China Sea Annual Meeting 2018
South China Sea Annual Meeting 2018 October 26-28, 2018 Hohai International Conference Center&Hotel (Junheng Hotel) (No. 1 Xikang Road, Gulou District, Nanjing) (Third Announcement, 25th September) Hosted by the College of Oceanography, Hohai University, the “South China Sea Annual Meeting 2018” will be held in Nanjing, China. The series of the workshops on “Mesoscale Processes in the South China Sea” has been successfully held for 4 times, sponsored by Xiamen University on the topic of “Ocean Meso-scale Processes at the Luzon Strait”, by Guangdong Ocean University on “Mesoscale Processes and Ocean Mixing in the South China Sea” by the Chinese University of Hong Kong on “South China Sea Coastal and Ocean Meso-scale Processes”, and by First Institute of Oceanography, State Oceanic Administration on “Mesoscale Processes and Deep Water Circulation in the South China Sea”, respectively. This will be the 5th international workshop of the series, and will provide an opportunity for exchanging and sharing ideas and recent progresses on the mesoscale/submesoscale processes and deep water circulation in the South China Sea (SCS). Themes and topics: (1) In situ observation and simulation of mesoscale/submesoscale processes in the SCS (2) Air-sea flux and upper layer ocean mixing in the SCS (3) High frequency variability in the SCS (4) Multi-scale variability of inter-ocean water exchange and heat/salt budget (5) Deep water circulation in the SCS (6) Numerical simulation of the mesoscale processes and deep water circulation in the SCS Sponsored by College of Oceanography, Hohai University Jiangsu Oceanographic Society (in preparation) LTO, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Science Schedule 26th Oct 2018, 09:00-18:00 Registration Lobby, Hohai International Conference Center&Hotel 27th -28th Oct 2018 Annual Meeting Meeting Room Ⅲ, Third Floor,Hohai International Conference Center&Hotel Registration Fee 1000 RMB for regular registration & 500 RMB for student registration. -
PUB Commences Coastal Protection Study at City-East Coast
PUB commences coastal protection study at City-East Coast First site-specific study key to developing a flood resilient master plan to protect Singapore’s south-eastern coastlines from sea-level rise Singapore, 18 May 2021 – National Water Agency PUB will commence a site-specific study along Singapore’s City-East Coast, looking into possible solutions to protect it from the threat of rising seas caused by climate change. This is the first of a series of planned studies for different parts of Singapore’s coastline to be progressively carried out over the next few years, and are a key plank in Singapore’s long-term coastal protection plans. 2 The study covers 57.8 km of the coastline, across three areas (see Annex A for detailed infographic showing the scope of study) – Changi, the East Coast-Marina stretch and part of the Greater Southern Waterfront district. This section of the coastline had been identified to be more vulnerable and critical based on factors such as the potential impact of a flood event, criticality of assets (e.g. airports, economic and industrial districts) and opportunities to dovetail with upcoming developments. 3 The study will take around four years to complete, and will include work such as literature review to glean international best practices, collecting site data to support design works, formulating adaptation measures and pathways and developing the designs of solutions to mitigate flood risks. 4 Ms Hazel Khoo, Director of PUB’s Coastal Protection Department, said, “When PUB was appointed national coastal protection agency in April 2020, this study was earmarked as a significant milestone in our mission to prepare Singapore for the impacts of sea-level rise. -
Observations of the Sand Engine Pilot Project
Coastal Engineering 111 (2016) 23–38 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Coastal Engineering journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/coastaleng Initial spreading of a mega feeder nourishment: Observations of the Sand Engine pilot project Matthieu A. de Schipper a,b,⁎, Sierd de Vries a, Gerben Ruessink c, Roeland C. de Zeeuw b, Jantien Rutten c, Carola van Gelder-Maas d, Marcel J.F. Stive a a Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Hydraulic Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands b Shore Monitoring and Research, The Hague, The Netherlands c Faculty of Geosciences, Department of Physical Geography, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands d Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment (Rijkswaterstaat), Lelystad, The Netherlands article info abstract Article history: Sand nourishments are a widely applied technique to increase beach width for recreation or coastal safety. As the Received 10 July 2015 size of these nourishments increases, new questions arise on the adaptation of the coastal system after such large Received in revised form 19 October 2015 unnatural shapes have been implemented. This paper presents the initial morphological evolution after imple- Accepted 30 October 2015 mentation of a mega-nourishment project at the Dutch coast intended to feed the surrounding beaches. In Available online xxxx total 21.5 million m3 dredged material was used for two shoreface nourishments and a large sandy peninsula. The Sand Engine peninsula, a highly concentrated nourishment of 17 million m3 of sand in the shape of a Keywords: fi Alongshore feeding sandy hook and protruding 1 km from shore, was measured intensively on a monthly scale in the rst 18 months Mega nourishment after completion. -
This Proceedings Contains More Than 300 Papers Presented at the 28Th
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2010 Proceedings of the 32nd International Conference COASTAL ENGINEERING 2010 30 June – 5 July 2010 Shanghai, China edited by Jane McKee Smith U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Coastal and Hydraulics Laboratory, USA Patrick Lynett Texas A&M University, USA Abstract: This Proceedings contains 363 papers and 29 posters presented at the 32nd International Conference on Coastal Engineering, which was held in Shanghai, China, 30 June to 5 July 2010. The Proceedings is divided into seven parts: Keynote; Waves; Swash, Nearshore Currents, and Long Waves; Sediment Transport and Morphology; Coastal Structures; Coastal Management, Environment, and Risk, and Posters. The individual papers cover a broad range of topics including theory, numerical and physical modeling, field measurements, case studies, design, and management. These papers provide engineers, scientists, and planners state-of-the-art information on coastal engineering and coastal processes. Foreword The 32nd International Conference on Coastal Engineering (ICCE 2010) was held in Shanghai, China, 30 June to 5 July of 2010. The Local Organizing Committee, led by Xie Shileng, Ge Jiufeng, Dou Xiping, and Zuo Qihua, is acknowledged for their dedicated preparation over many years that led to a successful conference with broad participation. Six-hundred attendees from 38 countries gathered at the Shanghai International Convention Center to discuss research and applications in coastal engineering. The papers contained in this Proceedings cover a wide range of topics including waves; swash, nearshore currents, and long waves; coastal management, risk, and environmental restoration; sediment transport and morphology; and coastal structures. The authors have provided state-of-the-art contributions, and this volume could not be produced without their commitment to solving coastal engineering challenges. -
Hohai University
Hohai University Hohai University is a state key university under the direct jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education of China. Its history can be traced back to Hohai Civil Engineering School, founded in 1915, and was the first institution focusing on research and education of water resources in China. Now it has become one of the universities on China’s state “Project 211” (China’s goal of building the best 100 universities in China in the 21st century) and one of the 56 universities in China with graduate schools. Hohai University has three campuses, covering a total area of 132 hectares. The University consists of 17 colleges and schools, one state key research center, one state key laboratory, 14 key laboratories and engineering research centers at the ministerial or provincial level. The specialties and disciplines in the field of hydrology and water resources, hydraulic and hydropower engineering, and civil engineering are among the strongest in China, with the discipline of hydraulic engineering the best in China. The faculty and graduates of Hohai University have been extensively and heavily involved in the research, design, construction, and management of some of the worldwide-known engineering projects such as the “Three Gorges Dam Project” and the “South-to-North Water Transfer Project”. Hohai University has a student population of over 33,000, including over 9,000 graduate students and more than 20,000 undergraduate students. There are over 3,000 staff members, among whom there are one full-time academician on the Chinese Academy of Engineering, 13 adjunct academicians, and more than 900 professors and associate professors. -
A Case Study of 211 Colleges and Universities in Jiangsu Province
Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research (ASSEHR), volume 237 3rd International Conference on Humanities Science, Management and Education Technology (HSMET 2018) Research on Evaluation System of University's Talent Competitiveness——A Case Study of 211 Colleges and Universities in Jiangsu Province Lei Zhu1,a, Xiaoxiao Kong2,b,* 1School of Economics and Management, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China 2School of Economics and Management, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China [email protected], [email protected] *Corresponding author: Lei Zhu, Master, [email protected] Keywords: Talent competitiveness; Evaluation index system; Influencing factors; Factor analysis Abstract. To realize the strategy of building a strong country in colleges and universities, it is necessary to improve the competitiveness of university personnel. A reasonable and effective evaluation of the talent competitiveness of colleges and universities is an important basis for measuring talents' work. Based on the assessment of the talent competitiveness of universities at home and abroad and related research, this article takes the 211 colleges and universities in Jiangsu Province as an example to carry out empirical research. Combining with the actual situation of talents in colleges and universities, it mainly includes the scale of talents in universities, the quality of talents, the construction of talents platform, and talents. Contributions to science and technology and five other aspects of the construction of university talent competitiveness evaluation index system, and collected 211 colleges and universities in Jiangsu Province in 2012-2016 data, the use of factor analysis method of Jiangsu Province, 211 colleges and universities in the overall situation of talent competitiveness The analysis and talent competitiveness of 211 colleges and universities in Jiangsu Province were ranked. -
Front Matter
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-87812-8 - Geomorphology and Global Environmental Change Edited by Olav Slaymaker, Thomas Spencer and Christine Embleton-Hamann Frontmatter More information Geomorphology and Global Environmental Change How will global environmental change affect our landscape and Columbia. He is a Former President of the Canadian Association the way we interact with it? The next 50 years will determine the of Geographers and the International Association of future of the environment in which we live, whether catastrophe or Geomorphologists, and a Linton Medallist. He has held visiting reorganisation. Global climate change will potentially have a professorships at the universities of Vienna, Canterbury, Oslo, profound effect on our landscape, but there are other important Southern Illinois, Taiwan, and Nanjing. He has authored 120 drivers of landscape change, including relief, hydroclimate and refereed journal articles and authored and edited 20 books. He is a runoff, sea level change and human activity. This volume Co-Editor-in-Chief of Catena and member of nine international summarises the state of the art concerning the landscape-scale editorial boards. geomorphic implications of global environmental change. It analyses the potential effects of environmental change on a THOMAS SPENCER is University Senior Lecturer in the range of landscapes, including mountains, lakes, rivers, coasts, Department of Geography, Director of the Cambridge Coastal reefs, rainforests, savannas, deserts, permafrost, and ice sheets and Research Unit, University of Cambridge, and Official Fellow, ice caps. Magdalene College, Cambridge. His research interests in wetland Geomorphology and Global Environmental Change provides a hydrodynamics and sedimentation, coral reef geomorphology, sea benchmark statement from some of the world’s leading level rise and coastal management have taken him to the Caribbean geomorphologists on the state of the environment and its likely Sea, the Pacific and Indian oceans, Venice and its lagoon and the near-future change. -
CERF-JCR Regional Vice Presidents
Table of Contents CERF-JCR RVP Coastal Education and Research Foundation [CERF] is pleased to announce our newly appointed Regional Vice Presidents (RVP), who through- out the international scientific community continue to provide outstanding representation of our coastal research society. Please join us in hon- oring the following individuals for their tremendous service and support of CERF and the JCR. CERF-JCR Regional Vice Presidents North America Oceania Gary B. Griggs, Ph.D. Charles Lemckert, Ph.D. James R. Houston, Ph.D. Anja Scheffers, D.Sc. Timothy W. Kana, Ph.D. Vic Semeniuk, Ph.D. Norberto C. Nadal-Caraballo, Ph.D. Andrew D. Short, Ph.D. Western Europe Southeast Asia Luciana S. Esteves, Ph.D. Hak Soo Lim, Ph.D. Carlos Pereira da Silva, Ph.D. Nobuo Mimura, D.Eng. Marcel J.F. Stive, Ph.D. Eastern Europe South America Niki Evelpidou, Ph.D. Vanda Claudino-Sales, Ph.D. Kazimierz K. Furmańczyk, D.Sc. Omar Defeo, D.Sc. Middle East and N. Africa Michael Phillips, Ph.D. 86 Just Cerfing Vol. 12, Issue 2 February 2021 Continued on Next Page 87 Table of Contents CERF-JCR RVP CERF-JCR RVP (North America) Gary B. Griggs, Ph.D. Timothy W. Kana, Ph.D. Gary Griggs, Ph.D., is a Distinguished Professor of Earth and Planetary Sci- Tim Kana, Ph.D., is the founder and president of Coastal Science & Engineer- ences at the University of California Santa Cruz where he has been on the ing, Inc. (CSE-Columbia, South Carolina, USA), with 35 years of experience faculty for 52 years. He directed the Institute of Marine Sciences for 26 years in coastal erosion projects in a wide range of settings including the Carolinas, where he led the development of the University’s Coastal Science Campus. -
Vibroengineering PROCEDIA Editor in Chief Minvydas Ragulskis Kaunas University of Technology, (Lithuania) [email protected]
March 2021, Volume 36 ISSN Print 2345-0533 ISSN Online 2538-8479 Vibroengineering PROCEDIA Editor in Chief Minvydas Ragulskis Kaunas University of Technology, (Lithuania) [email protected] Editorial Board Mahmoud Bayat Roudehen Branch, Islamic Azad University, (Iran) [email protected] Rafał Burdzik Silesian University of Technology, (Poland) [email protected] Jinde Cao Southeast University, (China) [email protected] Maosen Cao Hohai University, (China) [email protected] Sezgin Ersoy Marmara University, (Turkey) [email protected] W. H. Hsieh National Formosa University, (Taiwan) [email protected] Vassilis Kappatos Center for Research and Technology Hellas, (Greece) [email protected] Chen Lu Beihang University, (China) [email protected] Luis E. Muñoz Universidad de los Andes, (Colombia) [email protected] Nicola Nisticò Sapienza University of Rome, (Italy) [email protected] Vytautas Ostaševičius Kaunas University of Technology, (Lithuania) [email protected] Grigory Panovko Mechanical Engineering Research Institute of the Russian Academy of [email protected] Sciences, (Russia) Subhash Rakheja Concordia University, (Canada) [email protected] Vinayak Ranjan Bennett University, (India) [email protected] G. Eduardo Sandoval-Romero The National Autonomous University of Mexico, (Mexico) [email protected] Miguel Angel Fernandez Sanjuan University Rey Juan Carlos, (Spain) [email protected] Gangbing Song University of Houston, (USA) [email protected] Shigeki Toyama -
International Symposium on Water Resources Management and Comprehensive Reclamation of River Basins
International Symposium on Water Resources Management and Comprehensive Reclamation of River Basins International Scientific Symposium on Water Resources Management and Comprehensive Reclamation of River Basins Nanjing, China 17-19 November 2017 Organized by: Hohai University Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Chang’an University Operated by: Hohai University College of Hydrology and Water Resources State Key Laboratory of Hydrology-Water resources and Hydraulic Engineering National Engineering Research Center of Water Resources Efficient Utilization and Engineering Safety National Cooperative Innovation Center for Water Safety & Hydro Science Editorial Office of Water Science and Engineering Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing Institute of Geography Key Laboratory of Watershed Geography and Limnology Co-organized by: Beijing Normal University Tibet University Served by: Beijing Walter Consulting Co., Ltd 1 International Symposium on Water Resources Management and Comprehensive Reclamation of River Basins Scientific Committee Counselors: (Listed in no particular order) Congbin Fu Nanjing University and Hohai University, China Changming Liu Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, CAS, China Yaoru Lu China University of Mining and Technology and Hohai University, China Yuqun Xue Nanjing University, China Jiyang Wang Institute of Geology and Geophysics, CAS, China Edward A. Sudicky University of Waterloo, Canada and Hohai University, China Chairs: (Listed in no particular order) -
Third Announcement
COASTLAB2020 8th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE APPLICATION OF PHYSICAL MODELLING IN COASTAL AND PORT ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE CALL FOR ABSTRACTS Homepage: www.coastlab2020.com ConferenCe Email: [email protected] [email protected] LOC Chairs of CoastLab2020 Pengzhi Lin, Sichuan University Zhiguo He, Zhejiang University Dezhi Ning, Dalian University of Technology COASTLAB2020 – Zhoushan, China - May 25th-29th, 2020 WELCOME LETTER On behalf of the CoastLab2020 Organizing Committees, it is our great pleasure to invite you to participate in the 8th International ConferenCe on the AppliCation of PhysiCal Modelling in Coastal and Port Engineering and Science (CoastLab2020) during the 25th -29th of May, 2020 in Zhoushan, China. CoastLab2020 is organized under the auspices of the International Association of Hydro-Environment Engineering and Research (IAHR). It will be jointly hosted by Zhejiang University, Dalian University of Technology, Sichuan University and Zhejiang Ocean University, and co- organized by Hohai University. CoastLab2020 will build on the successes of previous conferences held in Porto (2006), Bari (2008), Barcelona (2010), Ghent (2012), Varna (2014), Ottawa (2016) and Santander (2018). It will provide a stimulating and enriching forum to discuss the latest developments in physical modelling applied to coastal engineering and new trends in coastal sciences. We are looking forward to collaborating with the Coastal and Maritime Hydraulics Committee of IAHR to host a successful CoastLab2020 in Zhoushan. Yours Sincerely -
Summer School on Human-Earth System Interactions in Estuaries and Coasts
Summer School on Human-Earth System Interactions in Estuaries and Coasts July 28-29, 2021 State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research East China Normal University How to join it? Summer School on Human-Earth System Interactions in Estuaries and Coasts July 28-29, 2021 Zoom Meeting Room: 82350981917 Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82350981917 Password: 403880 组委会联系方式(国内): Contacts (International affairs) : Contact: Mrs Li Tan 联系人:金老师 021-54836042 Tel: 021-54836491 电话: [email protected] Email: [email protected] 邮箱: 技术支持: Technical support: Contact: Mr. Yuan 联系人:袁老师 13764476296 Tel: 13764476296 电话: [email protected] Email: [email protected] 邮箱: Programme Day 1: Wednesday, July 28, 2021 Time(UTC+0) Time(UTC+8) Theme: Building Coastal Resilience Moderator: Professor Zhong Peng Delta response to rapid sediment decline 7:00-7:55 15:00-15:55 Qing He (East China Normal University) Building resilient coastal communities in the face of Covid-19 8:00-8:55 16:00-16:55 and rising sea level Bruce C. Glavovic (Massey University, New Zealand) 9:00-10:00 17:00-18:00 Coffee break Moderator: Dr. Leicheng Guo Coastal protection in the Netherlands and sediment management in the Dutch coastal system 10:00-10:55 18:00-18:55 Zheng Bing Wang (Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands) Coastal resilience as a management concept and how 11:00-11:55 19:00-19:55 managed realignment can contribute Ian Townend (University of Southhampton, UK) 12:00-12:30 20:00-20:30 Coffee break Moderator: Professor Zhixuan Feng Challenges of most