Abstract:
Changes in shoreline, vertically and horizontally relatively to mean sea level, are natural
and continuous processes. Shoreline can change spatially and temporally altering the
physical features of the coastal zone. This process can disturb the equilibrium of the
coastal environment, which is recognized as delicate, sensitive and having highest
biodiversity. On the other hand, shoreline change creates economic and social problems
due to destruction of the land and properties of the shoreline. In order to monitor the
changes of the coastal environment and economy, the rate of the shoreline change
should be identified quantitatively.
The prime objective of this study is to quantify the shoreline change in the South West
coastal zone in Sri Lanka with the help of available large-scale maps and field data.
Oldest large-scale maps that depict the shoreline is available at the Railway Department
of Sri Lanka, which were drawn in 1933 for the purpose of making plan for the railway
track.
Map interpretation techniques, Geographical Information System (GIS), Global
Positioning System (GPS) and basic statistical methods are to be employed in analyzing
data and presenting the results.