FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 16, 2008

State of the Beaches Report issued

COLUMBIA – While South Carolina’s beaches have been spared from major storms, erosion persisted in several areas of the state’s coastline during the past year, the S. C. Department of Health and Environmental Control reported today.

“Nearly all South Carolina’s beaches have a degree of long-term chronic erosion but some beaches are more stable than others,” said Carolyn R. Boltin, deputy commissioner for DHEC’s Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management. “Typically, beaches at the ends of barrier islands in unstabilized inlets experience more shoreline change. These areas include the Wild Dunes area on Isle of Palms and the southwestern end of Hunting Island.”

Boltin said the State of the Beaches Report analyzed beach monitoring data collected during 2007 through a partnership with Coastal Carolina University. According to the report, beaches with the most erosion with sand deficits and a minimal dry-sand beach width at high tide, from Beaufort County north through Horry County included:

The 2008 State of the Beaches Report is available on DHEC’s Web site at: http://www.scdhec.gov/environment/ocrm/pubs/reports.htm

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For more information:
Dan Burger (843) 953-0251
burgerdj@dhec.sc.gov
Thom Berry (803) 898-3885
berrytw@dhec.sc.gov

BNR1847