Official websites use .mil
Secure .mil websites use HTTPS
Aeolian Transport Pathway
Ocean City Inlet, Maryland, looking towards the Atlantic Ocean.
Shinnecock Inlet, New York, looking east alongshore.
Coos Bay
The United States, through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), has a national interest in the stability and evolution of coastal inlets. Almost $1 billion is expended annually to operate and maintain federal coastal inlet navigation projects, including the inlet channel, associated jetties and breakwaters, and adjacent inland waterways. The physical processes of coastal inlets span the navigation, shore protection, and coastal environmental missions of the USACE.
Because of the multiple interacting forces and the numerous scales of geomorphic change ranging in time from days of a storm to centuries for long-term adjustment, the physical processes of inlets are poorly understood. Little quantitative information is available to predict infilling of navigation channels; long-term change in the nearshore, which affects channel and jetty stability; short- and long-term migration trends and cycles of inlets; and the interactions among inlets, adjacent beaches, and estuary.
The Coastal Inlets Research Program (CIRP) advances the state of knowledge and develops engineering technology for predicting the waves, current, sediment transport, and morphology change at and around inlets. Products of the CIRP improve management and design of coastal inlets through increased reliability of actions and reduction in operation and maintenance costs. The CIRP takes a variety of approaches, including developing concepts and theory for all relevant time scales, numerical simulation, field data collection, and laboratory experimentation. Reports and peer-reviewed articles provide the information gained from the CIRP to the USACE, scientific community, and public.
Contact updated 25 August 2020