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Fripp Island



LIDAR Elevation Maps

Below is a false color image of Fripp Island, where the colors on the image represent the data values — in this case, elevation. The term "false color" simply means that the image is not a photograph, and that you should use the color bar on the image to interpret what the colors mean. This image shows the entrance to Skull Inlet, and a small tidal creek on the inland side of the island. You can make a similar image using the BeachMapper software application provided on the second volume of this CD-ROM set. For more information about the BeachMapper Application, click here.

Example of LIDAR Data

Portable Document Format (PDF) maps have been created to show LIDAR data for South Carolina's beaches and islands. PDF maps will allow you to zoom in on the data and print the maps at better resolution. However, because of the intense density of the data, the PDF files will not draw properly from your browser. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader® software installed on your computer, you can view the maps by navigating to the pdf/islands directory on this CD-ROM and double click on a file. A directory of maps is available in the readme.txt file. Adobe Acrobat Reader software has been provided on this CD-ROM.

To learn more about PDF documents and installing the software need to view them, click here.

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Beach Management History for Fripp Island

Fripp Island is a three-mile long barrier island located between Pritchards Island and Skull Inlet to the southwest and Hunting Island and Fripp Inlet to the northeast. Fripp, a gated-community, can be accessed via bridge from Hunting Island. Development on the island is primarily single family residential. Inlets have a strong influence on much of the shoreline and the island is almost continuously armored with revetments. An ebb-tidal delta off of Fripp Inlet offers a sheltering effect. Along the northeast half of Fripp Island a landward-migrating sand shoal has contributed significantly to the beach’s sand budget. The central portion of the island is classified as a standard zone, with an unstabilized inlet zone at the southwest end and a stabilized inlet zone at the northeast end. Analysis of long-term erosion trends indicates that the island is stable.

Beach profile surveys are conducted in the spring and fall at approximately 400 monitoring stations throughout the State of South Carolina. Various agencies participate in the beach profile collection, including The South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management (OCRM), Coastal Carolina University, and the College of Charleston. The results of the surveys provide a snapshot of the beach face. Over time, these surveys can be compiled to determine if and how the profile of the beach is changing. Below is a map of the stations and a sample of the profiles that can be extracted from the data. The beach profile data compiled by OCRM is provided on the second volume of this CD-ROM set.

Map of Benchmarks
*South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control
Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management

BERM Data Profile BERM Data Profile


For more information about South Carolina beach profiles see: South Carolina's Annual State of the Beaches Report, April 1998, SCDHEC OCRM, 1362 McMillian Ave. Suite 400, Charleston, SC 29405.

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