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Drones help monitor accelerating erosion along N.W.T.'s Arctic coastlines

Scientists are using drones to take thousands of photos of Western Arctic coastlines and create up-to-date 3D images of the eroding shores.

3D imagery to help scientists track and understand climate change-driven coastal changes

A 3D mosaic of the shore of Pelly Island, off the Mackenzie Delta, created using data compiled from drone footage. This summer, researchers measured 40 metres of coastal change in just one season on Pelly Island. (submitted by Dustin Whalen)

Researchers are using drones as a better, cheaper way to monitor accelerating erosion along N.W.T.'s Arctic coastlines.

Dustin Whalen, a physical scientist with the Geological Survey of Canada, says in the past they used old aerial photographs, satellite imagery, on-the-ground measurements and GPS techniques to track coastal change but none of those techniques give a 3D image or a sense of height.

In 2004, researchers got that kind of data using airborne LIDAR a type of remote sensing using lasers but it was expensive.

Drone footage of North Head shore

8 years ago
Duration 0:35
Drone footage of North Head shore

"Twelve years later we're able to use drones for a fraction of the cost to get the exact same data we would have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on years ago," he said.

Drones can also get pictures of places that are difficult or unsafe to access, like slumping sediments below juttingcliffs.

Roger Macleod from the Geological Survey of Canada flies the drone this past summer in the Western Arctic. (submitted by Dustin Whalen)

In the summer of 2016, Whalen's team at the Geological Survey of Canada studied the shores of Pelly Island, Hooper Island and Pullen Island off the Mackenzie Delta, Toker Point and Atkinson Point along the Tuktoyaktuk peninsula, and at Cape Bathurst. They were looking at ice-rich cliffs five metres or higher, located in the path of the region's dominant winds and waves.

Whalen's team made 50 20- to 30-minute drone excursions and took 70,000 photos.

"It's really not that hard to fly the drone," he said. "You can run it from an iPad."

They directedit where they wanted it to go, but otherwise the dronewaslargely autonomous.

"At one point it was raining and the drone told us it was getting wet and was going to return home now," he said.

Overlapping drone photos of a shoreline at North Head show how individual pictures can be combined to make a larger scale image and eventually a 3D model. (submitted by Dustin Whalen)

The photos are then put through a rendering software to create up-to-date 3D images of the shores. This can take days or weeks.

"Because there's so many 2D pictures all overlapped on each other taken from different angles, it's able to reconstruct the 3D sort of mosaic of it. It's able to give it structure."

3D rendering of North Head shore in 2016

8 years ago
Duration 0:41
3D rendering of North Head shore in 2016

Scientists are seeing an acceleration of coastal change in the area, he says. From the 1950s to the mid-1990s, erosion appeared to be stable on N.W.T.'s Arctic coast. After the mid-1990s, the rate of erosion sped up, even doubling in some areas.

At PellyIsland this summer, researchers measured 40 metres of change in one season.

"The change we're seeing is driven by climate," Whalen said.

Warmer air temperatures are leading to thawing permafrost, less sea ice and earlier spring break-up. That means the shorelines are being hit by waves and storms for longer periods than in the past.

A 3D mosaic of drone footage of Crumbling Point. The melting features are called retrogressive thaw failures and are common along the Beaufort Sea coastline. (submitted by Dustin Whalen)

More erosion from the shores means more sediment in the water and that could have potential effects on aquatic ecosystems and human activities, Whalen said. In Tuktoyaktuk, residents often travel the channel to the east of the island.

"If we're depositing more and more sediment into the water column, how is that affecting the water depths in that navigation channel?" he asked.

Whalen said the detailed imagery can help researchers understand the processes at work as well as helpplan erosion mitigation efforts.

The researchers hope to continue their drone shoreline studies next summer.

A 3D mosaic created from drone footage of the North Spit at Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T. Concrete mats and boulder rip-rap are shore protection measures that are currently in place for this region of the hamlet. (submitted by Dustin Whalen)