Title :
Notice of Retraction
Cumulative impacts of coastline variation on hydrodynamic condition and environmental capacity of Jiaozhou Bay
Author :
Jing Zhang ; Guipeng Yang ; Yi Tian
Author_Institution :
Coll. of Chem. & Chem. Eng., Ocean Univ. of China, Qingdao, China
Abstract :
Notice of Retraction
After careful and considered review of the content of this paper by a duly constituted expert committee, this paper has been found to be in violation of IEEE´s Publication Principles.
We hereby retract the content of this paper. Reasonable effort should be made to remove all past references to this paper.
The presenting author of this paper has the option to appeal this decision by contacting TPII@ieee.org.
This paper examines the definition and the generic typology of cumulative effects. The most important environmental problem caused by the development is the cumulative effects. Based on this theory, this paper selects Jiaozhou Bay as a typical coastal region, studies the cumulative effects on the hydrodynamic force environment and marine environmental capacity which caused by human reclaiming, and forecasts the hydrodynamic force and capacity change in the 2010 coastline planning. The results show the tide prism of Jiaozhou Bay is sensitive to coastline change and sea area. On the basis of coastline change, the velocity and direction of respective point in three respective year changes with different extent, which indicates that the water flow form can evidently influence coastline. It can be seen that, large areas of reclamation in Front Bay and Haixi Bay brings impact on the entire Jiaozhou Bay´s water power condition, thus, the tendency of the environmental capacity for the pollutants of Jiaozhou Bay is still decreasing.
Keywords :
environmental factors; geomorphology; oceanography; China; Front bay; Haixi bay; Jiaozhou bay environmental capacity; Jiaozhou bay hydrodynamic condition; coastal region; coastline planning; coastline variation; environmental pollutant capacity; human activities; hydrodynamic force environment; land reclamation; marine environmental capacity; Humans; Microelectronics; Mouth; Sea measurements; Tides; Cumulative impacts; Environmental capacity; Hydrodynamic condition; Man-made reclaiming; Tide prism;
Conference_Titel :
Environmental Science and Information Application Technology (ESIAT), 2010 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Wuhan
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7387-8
DOI :
10.1109/ESIAT.2010.5568313