In accordance with SO #3423 - The Gulf of America and SO #3424 - Mount McKinley and Landmarks Honoring the Alaskan People, new USGS data releases specific to those named places will utilize the new name Gulf of America and the restored name Mount McKinley. Per USGS practice, historical data will retain the name of the geographic features as they were known at the time the data were originally released.

Data Release

Gulf Islands National Seashore 2020 Workshop: Attendee Survey Results

By Arnell S. Forde and James G. Flocks

U.S. Geological Survey, St. Petersburg, Florida

Summary

The National Park Service (NPS), in collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), recognizes the need to quantify the sediment budget of the barrier islands within the Gulf Islands National Seashore (GINS) to understand the coastal processes affecting island resiliency. To achieve this goal, identifying and quantifying the physical parameters that drive long-term change is necessary to model the processes that are both generative and terminal in island evolution and capture island response to long-term human alteration and climatic patterns. To address this need, scientists sought to advance sediment budget modeling efforts by conducting a "Needs Assessment Workshop" for the GINS. The purpose of the workshop was to identify and prioritize the specific research and data needs regarding the sediment budget at the GINS that can enhance the NPS efforts to conserve the islands natural resources, cultural resources, and the facilities and infrastructure that support both conservation and visitor use of those resources.

The "Gulf Islands Sediment Budget Needs Assessment Workshop" was held, virtually, April 23–24 and May 27–28, 2020. The workshop series was organized by researchers from North Carolina State University in collaboration with NPS and USGS staff and was facilitated by National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) personnel. This data release (Forde and Flocks, 2023) includes survey results from two questionnaires submitted to attendees during the 2020 GINS sediment budget workshop. For further information pertaining to workshop details and results, refer to the associated USGS Open-File Report (Seekamp and others, 2023).

Seekamp, E., Flocks, J., Hotchkiss, C., York, L., and Irick, K., 2023, Gulf Islands National Seashore regional sediment budget research and data needs—Workshop series summary: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2022–1087, 46 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20221087.

Data

File Name and Description Metadata (XML format) Metadata (text format) Download File
GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_April2020.zip

Attendee responses to April 2020 GINS workshop survey questions (.csv,.xlsx, .docx)
2020_GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_metadata.xml
2020_GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_metadata.txt
GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_April2020.zip

(100 KB)
GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_May2020.zip

Attendee responses to May 2020 GINS workshop survey questions (.csv,.xlsx, .docx)
Same as above Same as above GINS_Workshop_Survey_
Results_May2020.zip

(86 KB)

Labeled satellite map of the northern Gulf of Mexico coast shows the 2 study areas with red brackets
Figure 1. Map of the Mississippi and Florida areas of the Gulf Islands National Seashore (GINS); northern Gulf of Mexico general GINS boundary shown by red brackets. Basemap satellite imagery is from NOAA/USGS Landsat 8.

Suggested Citation

Forde, A.S. and Flocks, J.G., 2023, Gulf Islands National Seashore 2020 Workshop–Attendee survey results: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9JG3J7B.