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1 May 2008 Evolution of Malvan Coast, Konkan, West Coast of India—A Case Study Using Remote Sensing Data
P. T. Hanamgond, D. Mitra
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Abstract

Konkan is the coastal lowland extending east–west from the Arabian Sea to the Western Ghat escarpment and north–south from north of Mumbai to north of Goa. The city Malvan is located in Sindhudurg district and bounded by three creeks viz., Karli, Kolamb, and Kalavli, of which Karli and Kalavli are the major rivers giving sediment input for this coast. The place is well known for the Sindhudurg Island Fort built by the Maratha King Shivaji during the 16th century and is crowded by tourists during the fair-weather season. The present study is a preliminary work and emerged while carrying out remote sensing application on the southern coast of Maharashtra. Hence, the present report does not have detailed in situ/field data. The remote sensing data provide significant information regarding physical setting, tectonic features, and coastal landforms, especially the large-scale morphological features such as beach ridges, spits, bars, islands, barrier beaches, and lagoons. In the present study, beach ridges and lineaments were observed along the Malvan coast and have been utilized to understand the evolution of the Malvan coast. Along with this, coastal erosion/accretion and landform/land cover classification have also been undertaken using remote sensing data.

P. T. Hanamgond and D. Mitra "Evolution of Malvan Coast, Konkan, West Coast of India—A Case Study Using Remote Sensing Data," Journal of Coastal Research 2008(243), 672-678, (1 May 2008). https://doi.org/10.2112/06-0692.1
Received: 22 April 2006; Accepted: 1 January 2007; Published: 1 May 2008
KEYWORDS
Beaches
coastal evolution
land use
lineaments
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