Waves along parts of California coast are getting bigger and badder due to climate change, new study says

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The average height of winter waves along parts of the California coast have increased by as much as 1 foot since 1970 largely due to climate change, increasing the threat of sea cliff collapses, ac…

Gary Robbins | The San Diego Union-Tribune

“The dividing line was 1970, when global warming began to accelerate,” said Peter Bromirski, a researcher at UCSD’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the lead author of the paper, which was published Tuesday in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Ocean. Storms triggered landslides in the Big Sur area that closed parts of Highway 1 for months, whipped up waves that largely destroyed the Capitola Wharf near Santa Cruz, and produced a dangerous bluff collapse in the Blacks Beach section of La Jolla.

 

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Waves along parts of California coast are getting bigger and badder due to climate change, new study saysThe report found that the change significantly increases the threat of sea cliff collapses along the coast, including San Diego County, where bluff failures are not uncommon
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