“…Coastal change measurements are also useful as a basis to understand and to predict the response of coastal landforms to storms, climate, and sealevel change that will occur in the future (Cazenave and Cozannet, 2014;Cowell and Kench, 2001;Fitzgerald et al, 2008;Hapke and Plant, 2010;McGranahan, Balk, and Anderson, 2007). Several techniques are used to measure beach and sea-cliff changes, including topographic and bathymetric surveying (Larson and Kraus, 1994;Morton, Paine, and Gibeaut, 1994;Ruggiero et al, 2005), aerial or satellite-based imagery (Fletcher et al, 2003;Hapke and Richmond, 2000;White and El Asmar, 1999), light detection and ranging (LIDAR) from airborne or terrestrial platforms (Rosser et al, 2013;Sallenger et al, 2002;Stockton et al, 2002;Vann Jones et al, 2015;Young et al, 2010), and combinations of these techniques (Adams and Chandler, 2002;Ruggiero et al, 2013;Smith and Zarillo, 1990).…”