Erosion Rate Doubles on Stretch of Alaskan Coast

Top-left: Researcher Benjamin Jones measures erosion along a part of Alaska's Arctic coast where a block of permafrost (ground historically frozen year-round) has collapsed. Top-right: Another collapsed block of permafrost. Bottom-left: A nearly century-old whaling boat imaged in July 2007 along the Beaufort Sea coast near Lonely, Alaska had washed away a few months later. Bottom-right: A cabin along the Arctic Alaska coastline was recently washed into the ocean because the bluff it was sitting on top of was eroded away.
(Image credit: USGS/Christopher Arp, Benjamin Jones)

Most of California isn't falling into the sea yet, but big parts of Alaska are.

In a possible sign of things to come, erosion of a stretch of Alaska's coast surged in recent years to more than double the average historical rate, threatening some towns, a new study finds. The loss of land is documented in photos that show newly collapsed sections of permafrost coastline as well as decades-old artifacts that have slipped into the sea.

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