Abstract Seacliff erosion in steep terrain poses major risks to transportation and critical infrastructure. In Big Sur, California, USA, seacliff erosion threatens the sustainability of the central coast stretch of California State Route 1, a transportation corridor that is critical to the region's economy. Published cliff retreat rates for the region range from 1 to 40 cm yr −1 , highlighting that high‐resolution, process‐based studies could enhance understanding of the causes of spatial and temporal variability. We quantified cliff erosion and investigated its drivers along ∼13 km of the Big Sur coastline at week–month timescales during the late fall to early spring wet seasons between January 2017 and June 2023 by analyzing 3D point clouds developed from aerial imagery using four‐dimensional structure‐from‐motion (4D SfM) photogrammetry techniques. We calculated cliff face retreat rates of 2.23 ± 3.06 cm yr −1 (mean ±1 σ ), an order of magnitude lower than long‐term estimated rates for the region (which included large deep‐seated landslides), but in line with short‐term rates reported across California. Change detection imagery comparison, cliff profiles through time, and statistical analysis reveal a cyclical cliff evolution process in which erosion by wave action at the cliff base destabilizes the cliff and primes it for subsequent failure during precipitation events. Although more erosion by volume could be attributed to precipitation‐induced increases in soil moisture (784 m 3 km −1 yr −1 ) compared with erosion attributed to wave power (282 m 3 km −1 yr −1 ), our observations underscore the coupled nature of these processes in driving cliff evolution, consistent with established theory and observations.
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Dow et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7e5cbfa21ec5bbf068df — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2025ea004595
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context:
Helen W. Dow
Jonathan A. Warrick
Andrew C. Ritchie
Earth and Space Science
United States Geological Survey
Pacific Science Center
Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center
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