14. HENRY S. SHARP, "Artificial Beach Construction in the Vicinity of New York," The 

 Scientific Monthly, Vol. 25, July 1927, p. 34. 



15. DOUGLAS W. JOHNSON and WARREN S. SMITH, "Recent Storm Effects on the 

 Northern New Jersey ShoreUne, and their Supposed Relation to Coastal Subsidence," 

 Annual Administrative Report of the State (New Jersey) Geologist, Bull. No. 12, 1913, 

 p. 32. 



16. Ibid, p. 40. 



17. DOUGLAS W. JOHNSON, "Studies of Mean Sea-Level," Report of the Committee on 

 Shoreline Investigations, BuU. No. 70, National Research Council, July 1929. 



18. For example, in "Sea Level Changes Along the Coasts of the United States in Recent 

 Years," H. A. Marmer stated, "Taking New York, for which we have the longest series 

 of observations, it is seen that from 1893 to about 1930 there was relatively little 

 change in sea level." Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Vol. 30, No. 2, Apr. 

 1949, p. 202. 



19. STEACY D. HICKS, "On the Classification and Trends of Long Period Sea Level 

 Series," Shore and Beach, Apr. 1972, p. 20. 



20. NEW JERSEY BOARD OF COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION, ft e/yori on the Erosion 

 and Protection of the New Jersey Beaches, 1922, p. 14. 



21. Ibid. 



22. Ibid. 



23. JOHNSON and SMITH, op. cit., p. 44. 



24. NEW JERSEY BOARD OF COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION, Report on the Erosion 

 and Protection of the New Jersey Beaches, 1922, p. 5. 



25. Ibid. 



26. B. F. CRESSON, Jr., in discussion of, "The Preservation of Sandy Beaches in the 

 Vicinity of New York City," by ELLIOTT J. DENT, Transactions American Society of 

 Civil Engineers, Vol. 80, 1916, p. 1816.. 



27. NEW JERSEY BOARD OF COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION, Report on the Erosion 

 and Protection of the New Jersey Beaches, 1922, p. 6. 



28. Annual Report for the Year 1922-1923, National Research Council, Division of 

 Geology and Geography, App. A, p. 5. 



96 



