“…The transformation of a breaking wave over a slope is a problem of obvious concern in the design and planning of coastal facilities A number of investigators have considered this topic, including Freeman and LeMe'haute' (1964), Horikawa and Kuo (1966), LeMehaute* (1962), Divoky, LeMehaute", and Lin (1970), Nakamura, Shiraishi, and Sasaki (1966), and Street and Camfield (1966) The present contribution considers an essential aspect neglected m previous studies, the phenomenon of "wave set-up " Set-up, while negligible seaward of the breaking point, becomes dominant with respect to still-water depth as the shore is approached It is apparent, then that any analysis of breaking wave height transformation should account for the set-up Experimental investigations of set-up have been made by Saville (1961) and by Bowen, Inman, and Simmons (1968) with the result that the maximum elevation may be a significant fraction (~ 50%) of the breaking wave height Additionally, measurements obtained during the Mono Lake explosion-wave tests indicated a set-up value equalling the maximum height of the superposed dispersive wave train (Van Dorn, et al, 1968) Hwang (1970 also investigated dispersive wave trains and found a fluctuating set-up of roughly half the peak wave height Wave set-up has been investigated extensively in a series of papers by 61,62,64) from an analytical approach The difficulty m applying their results to the Tetra Tech, Inc , Pasadena, California surf zone, arises from the problem of finding an adequate description of the waves after breaking Bowen, Inman, and Simmons (1968) assumed that the wave height remains a constant fraction of mean water depth after breaking and found, from a momentum balance, a linear set-up variation…”