4.7 Article

Marine geohazards: Past, present, and future

Journal

ENGINEERING GEOLOGY
Volume 323, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.enggeo.2023.107230

Keywords

Marine geohazards; Engineering geology; Hazard mitigation; Submarine landslide; Observation

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This paper aims to highlight the advances and challenges on marine geohazards. The author presents an overview of marine geohazard research based on bibliometric analysis and their understanding as an engineering geologist. The paper summarizes marine geohazard research in terms of development phase, authorship distribution, related areas and disciplines, keywords, and subjects of interest. The trends of past events, present processes, and future marine geohazards are discussed. Finally, three recommendations for scientific research and safeguarding society are provided.
Marine geohazards related to geological features and processes in coastal and offshore environments can cause damage to health, environment, field installations, or loss of life and assets. Given increasing human activities in marine environments and population density on coasts, threats to society from marine geohazards are serious. However, the understanding and awareness of marine geohazards are still severely limited. This paper is aimed to highlight the advances and challenges on marine geohazards. Here, we present an overview of marine geohazard research to discuss the past, present, and future of marine geohazards based on bibliometric analysis and our understanding from an engineering geologist's perspective. This paper summarizes marine geohazard research in the development phase, geographic authorship distribution, related areas and disciplines, keywords, and subjects of focused interest. Trends of significance are synopsized from past events (over the last three decades), present processes, and future (foretelling) marine geohazards. Finally, we provide three recommendations from scientific research and safeguarding society perspectives: (1) intense involvement of engineering geologists, (2) integrated multidisciplinary marine geohazard research, and (3) collaborative efforts in marine geohazard mitigation. There is still a long way to go in protecting the public and infrastructure from marine geohazards.

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