CoastSat is an open-source software toolkit written in Python that enables users to obtain time-series of shoreline position at any coastline worldwide from 39 years (and growing) of publicly available satellite imagery.
👉 Visit the CoastSat website to explore and download existing datasets of satellite-derived shorelines and beach slopes generated with CoastSat in the Pacific and Atlantic basins.
👉 Useful publications describing the toolbox:
- Shoreline detection algorithm: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2019.104528 (Open Access)
- Accuracy assessment: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coastaleng.2019.04.004
- Challenges in meso-macrotidal environments: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2021.107707
- Basin-scale shoreline mapping (Paficic): https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-022-01117-8 (The Conversation article here)
- Beach slope estimation: https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL088365 (preprint here)
- Beach slope dataset for Australia: https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-14-1345-2022
👉 Other repositories and extensions related to the toolbox:
- CoastSeg: an interactive toolbox for downloading satellite imagery, applying image segmentation models, mapping shoreline positions and more.
- SDS_Benchmark: testbed for satellite-derived shorelines mapping algorithms and validation against benchmark datasets.
- CoastSat.slope: estimates the beach-face slope from the satellite-derived shorelines obtained with CoastSat.
- CoastSat.PlanetScope: shoreline extraction for PlanetScope Dove imagery (near-daily since 2017 at 3m resolution).
- CoastSat.islands: 2D planform measurements for small reef islands.
- CoastSat.Maxar: shoreline extraction on Maxar World-View images (in progress)
- InletTracker: monitoring of intermittent open/close estuary entrances.
Satellite remote sensing can provide low-cost long-term shoreline data capable of resolving the temporal scales of interest to coastal scientists and engineers at sites where no in-situ field measurements are available. CoastSat enables the non-expert user to extract shorelines from Landsat 5, Landsat 7, Landsat 8, Landsat 9 and Sentinel-2 images. The shoreline detection algorithm implemented in CoastSat is optimised for sandy beach coastlines. It combines a sub-pixel border segmentation and an image classification component, which refines the segmentation into four distinct categories such that the shoreline detection is specific to the sand/water interface.
The toolbox has the following functionalities:
- easy retrieval of satellite imagery spanning the user-defined region of interest and time period from Google Earth Engine, including state-of-the-art pre-processing steps (re-projecting the different bands, pansharpening, advanced cloud masking).
- automated extraction of shorelines from all the selected images using a sub-pixel resolution technique and options for quality-control.
- intersection of the 2D shorelines with user-defined shore-normal transects.
- tidal correction using tide/water levels and an estimate of the beach slope.
- post-processing of the shoreline time-series, despiking and seasonal averaging.
To run the toolbox you first need to install the required Python packages in an environment. To do this we will use Anaconda, which can be downloaded freely here. If you are a more advanced user and have Mamba installed, use Mamba as it will install everything faster and without problems (highly recommended if you know about python environments).
Once you have it installed on your PC, open the Anaconda prompt (in Mac and Linux, open a terminal window) and use the cd
command (change directory) to go the folder where you have downloaded this repository (e.g., cd C:\Users\kilian\Documents\Github\CoastSat
).
Create a new environment named coastsat
with all the required packages by entering these commands in succession:
conda create -n coastsat
conda activate coastsat
conda install -c conda-forge geopandas -y
conda install -c conda-forge earthengine-api scikit-image matplotlib astropy notebook -y
pip install pyqt5 imageio-ffmpeg
All the required packages have now been installed and are self-contained in an environment called coastsat
. Always make sure that the environment is activated with:
conda activate coastsat
To confirm that you have successfully activated CoastSat, your terminal command line prompt should now start with (coastsat).
coastsat
again:
conda clean --all
You can also install the packages with the Anaconda Navigator, in the Environments tab. For more details, the following link shows how to create and manage an environment with Anaconda.
First, you need to request access to Google Earth Engine at https://signup.earthengine.google.com/. Then install gcloud
, go to https://cloud.google.com/sdk/docs/install and install gcloud CLI. After you have installed gcloud CLI it will automatically launch and let you authenticate with your GEE account (or gmail). Then close the Anaconda Prompt and restart it.
Now you are ready to start using the CoastSat toolbox!
conda activate coastsat
each time you are preparing to use the toolbox.
An example of how to run the software in a Jupyter Notebook is provided in the repository (example_jupyter.ipynb
). To run this, first activate your coastsat
environment with conda activate coastsat
(if not already active), and then type:
jupyter notebook
A web browser window will open. Point to the directory where you downloaded this repository and click on example_jupyter.ipynb
. A Jupyter Notebook combines formatted text and code. To run the code, place your cursor inside one of the code sections and click on the run cell
button (or press Shift
+ Enter
) and progress forward.
If you prefer to use Spyder or other integrated development environments (IDEs), a Python script named example.py
is also included in the repository. If using Spyder, make sure that the Graphics Backend is set to Automatic and not Inline (as this mode doesn't allow to interact with the figures). To change this setting go under Preferences>IPython console>Graphics.
The following sections show an example of how to run the full CoastSat workflow at Narrabeen-Collaroy beach (Australia).
To retrieve from the GEE server the available satellite images cropped around the user-defined region of coastline for the particular time period of interest, the following variables are required:
polygon
: the coordinates of the region of interest (longitude/latitude pairs in WGS84), do not exceed 100 sqkm.dates
: dates over which the images will be retrieved (e.g.,dates = ['2017-12-01', '2018-01-01']
)sat_list
: satellite missions to consider (e.g.,sat_list = ['L5', 'L7', 'L8', 'L9', 'S2']
for Landsat 5, 7, 8, 9 and Sentinel-2 collections)sitename
: name of the site (this is the name of the subfolder where the images and other accompanying files will be stored)filepath
: filepath to the directory where the data will be storedlandsat_collection
: whether to use Collection 1 (C01
) or Collection 2 (C02
). Note that after 2022/01/01, Landsat images are only available in Collection 2. Landsat 9 is therefore only available as Collection 2. So if the user has selectedC01
, images prior to 2022/01/01 will be downloaded from Collection 1, while images captured after that date will be automatically taken fromC02
.- (optional)
S2tile
: for Sentinel-2 only, this parameter let's you specify the tile from which you'd like to crop your ROI, this avoids having many duplicates in the Sentinel-2 collection. For exampleinputs['S2tile'] = '56HLH'
is the S2 tile for Sydney, check this website to view all tiles and find the one covering your ROI.
The call metadata = SDS_download.retrieve_images(inputs)
will launch the retrieval of the images and store them as .TIF files (under /filepath/sitename). The metadata contains the exact time of acquisition (in UTC time) of each image, its projection and its geometric accuracy. If the images have already been downloaded previously and the user only wants to run the shoreline detection, the metadata can be loaded directly by running metadata = SDS_download.get_metadata(inputs)
.
The screenshot below shows an example of inputs that will retrieve all the images of Collaroy-Narrabeen (Australia) acquired by Sentinel-2 in December 2017.
To map the shorelines, the following user-defined settings are needed:
cloud_thresh
: threshold on maximum cloud cover that is acceptable on the images (value between 0 and 1 - this may require some initial experimentation).dist_clouds
: buffer around cloud pixels where shoreline is not mapped (in metres)output_epsg
: epsg code defining the spatial reference system of the shoreline coordinates. It has to be a cartesian coordinate system (i.e. projected) and not a geographical coordinate system (in latitude and longitude angles). See http://spatialreference.org/ to find the EPSG number corresponding to your local coordinate system. If you do not use a local projection your results may not be accurate.check_detection
: if set toTrue
the user can quality control each shoreline detection interactively (recommended when mapping shorelines for the first time) and accept/reject each shoreline.adjust_detection
: in case users wants more control over the detected shorelines, they can set this parameter toTrue
, then they will be able to manually adjust the threshold used to map the shoreline on each image.save_figure
: if set toTrue
a figure of each mapped shoreline is saved under /filepath/sitename/jpg_files/detection, even if the two previous parameters are set toFalse
. Note that this may slow down the process.
There are additional parameters (min_beach_size
, min_length_sl
, cloud_mask_issue
, sand_color
and pan_off
) that can be tuned to optimise the shoreline detection (for Advanced users only). For the moment leave these parameters set to their default values, we will see later how they can be modified.
An example of settings is provided here:
Once the images have been downloaded you can visualise them and create an MP4 animation using SDS_preprocess.save_jpg(metadata, settings)
and SDS_tools.make_animation_mp4(fp_images, fps, fn_animation)
as shown in the Jupyter Notebook.
Before running the batch shoreline detection, there is the option to manually digitize a reference shoreline on one cloud-free image. This reference shoreline helps to reject outliers and false detections when mapping shorelines as it only considers as valid shorelines the points that are within a defined distance from this reference shoreline (defined by settings['max_dist_ref']
).
The user can manually digitize one or several reference shorelines on one of the images by calling:
settings['reference_shoreline'] = SDS_preprocess.get_reference_sl_manual(metadata, settings)
settings['max_dist_ref'] = 100 # max distance (in meters) allowed from the reference shoreline
This function allows the user to click points along the shoreline on cloud-free satellite images, as shown in the animation below.
The maximum distance (in metres) allowed from the reference shoreline is defined by the parameter max_dist_ref
. This parameter is set to a default value of 100 m. If you think that 100 m buffer from the reference shoreline will not capture the shoreline variability at your site, increase the value of this parameter. This may be the case for large nourishments or eroding/accreting coastlines.
Once all the settings have been defined, the batch shoreline detection can be launched by calling:
output = SDS_shoreline.extract_shorelines(metadata, settings)
When check_detection
is set to True
, a figure like the one below appears and asks the user to manually accept/reject each detection by pressing on the keyboard the right arrow
(⇨) to keep
the shoreline or left arrow
(⇦) to skip
the mapped shoreline. The user can break the loop at any time by pressing escape
(nothing will be saved though).
When adjust_detection
is set to True
, a figure like the one below appears and the user can adjust the position of the shoreline by clicking on the histogram of MNDWI pixel intensities. Once the threshold has been adjusted, press Enter
and then accept/reject the image with the keyboard arrows.
Once all the shorelines have been mapped, the output is available in two different formats (saved under /filepath/data/SITENAME):
SITENAME_output.pkl
: contains a list with the shoreline coordinates, the exact timestamp at which the image was captured (UTC time), the geometric accuracy and the cloud cover of each individual image. This list can be manipulated with Python, a snippet of code to plot the results is provided in the example script.SITENAME_output.geojson
: this output can be visualised in a GIS software (e.g., QGIS, ArcGIS).
The figure below shows how the satellite-derived shorelines can be opened in a GIS software (QGIS) using the .geojson
output. Note that the coordinates in the .geojson
file are in the spatial reference system defined by the output_epsg
.
As mentioned above, there are some additional parameters that can be modified to optimise the shoreline detection:
min_beach_area
: minimum allowable object area (in metres^2) for the class 'sand'. During the image classification, some features (for example, building roofs) may be incorrectly labelled as sand. To correct this, all the objects classified as sand containing less than a certain number of connected pixels are removed from the sand class. The default value is 4500 m^2, which corresponds to 20 connected pixels of 15 m^2. If you are looking at a very small beach (<20 connected pixels on the images), try decreasing the value of this parameter.min_length_sl
: minimum length (in metres) of shoreline perimeter to be valid. This can be used to discard small features that are detected but do not correspond to the actual shoreline. The default value is 500 m. If the shoreline that you are trying to map is shorter than 500 m, decrease the value of this parameter.cloud_mask_issue
: the cloud mask algorithm applied to Landsat images by USGS, namely CFMASK, does have difficulties sometimes with very bright features such as beaches or white-water in the ocean. This may result in pixels corresponding to a beach being identified as clouds and appear as masked pixels on your images. If this issue seems to be present in a large proportion of images from your local beach, you can switch this parameter toTrue
and CoastSat will remove from the cloud mask the pixels that form very thin linear features, as often these are beaches and not clouds. Only activate this parameter if you observe this very specific cloud mask issue, otherwise leave to the default value ofFalse
.sand_color
: this parameter can take 3 values:default
,latest
,dark
orbright
. Only change this parameter if you are seing that with thedefault
the sand pixels are not being classified as sand (in orange). If your beach has dark sand (grey/black sand beaches), you can set this parameter todark
and the classifier will be able to pick up the dark sand. On the other hand, if your beach has white sand and thedefault
classifier is not picking it up, switch this parameter tobright
. Thelatest
classifier contains all the training data and can pick up sand in most environments (but not as accurately). At this stage the different classifiers are only available for Landsat images (soon for Sentinel-2 as well).pan_off
: by default Landsat 7, 8 and 9 images are pan-sharpened using the panchromatic band and a PCA algorithm. If for any reason you prefer not to pan-sharpen the Landsat images, switch it off by settingpan_off
toTrue
.s2cloudless_prob
: by default set to 60, this is the threshold to identify cloudy pixels in the s2cloudless probability mask. If you see that too many cloudy pixels appear on the image increase the threshold, if too many cloudy pixels are missed lower the threshold (reasonable range between 20 and 80).
CoastSat's shoreline mapping alogorithm uses an image classification scheme to label each pixel into 4 classes: sand, water, white-water and other land features. While this classifier has been trained using a wide range of different beaches, it may be that it does not perform very well at specific sites that it has never seen before. You can try the different classifiers already available in the /classification
folder by changing the settings['sand_color']
parameter to dark
or bright
, but if none of those fit your data you can train a new classifier for your site. This process is described in another Jupyter notebook called re-train CoastSat classifier and located in the /classification folder.
This section shows how to obtain time-series of shoreline change along shore-normal transects. Each transect is defined by two points, its origin and a second point that defines its length and orientation. The origin is always defined first and located landwards, the second point is located seawards. There are 3 options to define the coordinates of the transects:
- Interactively draw shore-normal transects along the mapped shorelines:
transects = SDS_transects.draw_transects(output, settings)
- Load the transect coordinates from a .geojson file:
transects = SDS_tools.transects_from_geojson(path_to_geojson_file)
- Create the transects by manually providing the coordinates of two points:
transects = dict([])
transects['Transect 1'] = np.array([[342836, ,6269215], [343315, 6269071]])
transects['Transect 2'] = np.array([[342482, 6268466], [342958, 6268310]])
transects['Transect 3'] = np.array([[342185, 6267650], [342685, 6267641]])
settings['output_epsg']
, otherwise they won't match the shorelines.
Once the shore-normal transects have been defined, the intersection between the 2D shorelines and the transects is computed with the following function:
settings['along_dist'] = 25
cross_distance = SDS_transects.compute_intersection(output, transects, settings)
The parameter along_dist
defines the along-shore distance around the transect over which shoreline points are selected to compute the intersection. The default value is 25 m, which means that the intersection is computed as the median of the points located within 25 m of the transect (50 m alongshore-median). This helps to smooth out localised water levels in the swash zone.
An example is shown in the animation below:
There is also a more advanced function to compute the intersections SDS_transects.compute_intersection_QA()
, which provides more quality-control and can deal with small loops, multiple intersections, false detections etc. It is recommended to use this function as it can provide cleaner shoreline time-series. An example of parameter values is provided below, the default parameters should work in most cases (leave as it is if unsure).
along_dist
: (in metres), alongshore distance to caluclate the intersection (median of points within this distance).min_points
: minimum number of shoreline points to calculate an intersection.max_std
: (in metres) maximum STD for the shoreline points within the alongshore range, if STD is above this value a NaN is returned for this intersection.max_range
: (in metres) maximum RANGE for the shoreline points within the alongshore range, if RANGE is above this value a NaN is returned for this intersection.min_chainage
: (in metres) furthest distance landward of the transect origin that an intersection is accepted, beyond this point a NaN is returned.multiple_inter
: ('auto','nan','max') defines how to deal with multiple shoreline intersectionsauto_prc
: (value between 0 and 1) by default 0.1, percentage of the time that a multiple intersection needs to be present to use the max in auto mode
The multiple_inter
setting helps to deal with multiple shoreline intersections along the same transect. This is quite common, for example when there is a lagoon behind the beach and the transect crosses two water bodies. The function will try to identify this cases and the user can choose whether to:
'nan'
: always assign a NaN when there are multile intersections.'max'
: always take the max (intersection the furtherst seaward).'auto'
: let the function decide transect by transect, and if it thinks there are two water bodies, take the max. If'auto'
is chosen, theauto_prc
parameter will define when to use the max, by default it is set to 0.1, which means that the function thinks there are two water bodies if 10% of the time-series show multiple intersections.
Each satellite image is captured at a different stage of the tide, therefore a tidal correction is necessary to remove the apparent shoreline changes cause by tidal fluctuations.
In order to tidally-correct the time-series of shoreline change you will need the following data:
-
Time-series of water/tide level: this can be formatted as a .csv file, an example is provided here. Make sure that the dates are in UTC time as the CoastSat shorelines are always in UTC time. Also the vertical datum needs to be approx. Mean Sea Level.
-
An estimate of the beach-face slope along each transect. If you don't have this data you can obtain it using CoastSat.slope, see Vos et al. 2020 for more details (preprint available here).
Wave setup and runup corrections are not included in the toolbox, but for more information on these additional corrections see Castelle et al. 2021.
The tidally-corrected time-series can be post-processed to remove outliers with a despiking algorithm SDS_transects.reject_outliers()
. This function was developed to remove obvious outliers in the time-series by removing the points that do not make physical sense in a shoreline change setting. For example, the shoreline can experience rapid erosion after a large storm, but it will then take time to recover and return to its previous state. Therefore, if the shoreline erodes/accretes suddenly of a significant amount (max_cross_change
) and then immediately returns to its previous state, this spike does not make any physical sense and can be considered an outlier.
Additionally, this function also checks that the Otsu thresholds used to map the shoreline are within the typical range defined by otsu_threshold
, with values outside this range (typically -0.5 to 0) identified as outliers.
Additionally, a set of functions to compute seasonal averages, monthly averages and linear trends on the shoreline time-series are provided.
SDS_transects.seasonal_averages()
SDS_transects.monthly_averages()
This section provides code to compare the satellite-derived shorelines against the survey data for Narrabeen, available at http://narrabeen.wrl.unsw.edu.au/.
Having a problem? Post an issue in the Issues page (please do not email).
If you are willing to contribute, check out our todo list in the Projects page.
- Fork the repository (https://github.com/kvos/coastsat/fork). A fork is a copy on which you can make your changes.
- Create a new branch on your fork
- Commit your changes and push them to your branch
- When the branch is ready to be merged, create a Pull Request (how to make a clean pull request explained here)
This section provides a list of references that use the CoastSat toolbox as well as existing shoreline datasets extracted with CoastSat.
-
Vos K., Splinter K.D., Harley M.D., Simmons J.A., Turner I.L. (2019). CoastSat: a Google Earth Engine-enabled Python toolkit to extract shorelines from publicly available satellite imagery. Environmental Modelling and Software. 122, 104528. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2019.104528 (Open Access)
-
Vos K., Harley M.D., Splinter K.D., Simmons J.A., Turner I.L. (2019). Sub-annual to multi-decadal shoreline variability from publicly available satellite imagery. Coastal Engineering. 150, 160–174. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coastaleng.2019.04.004
-
Vos K., Harley M.D., Splinter K.D., Walker A., Turner I.L. (2020). Beach slopes from satellite-derived shorelines. Geophysical Research Letters. 47(14). https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL088365 (Open Access preprint here)
-
Vos, K. and Deng, W. and Harley, M. D. and Turner, I. L. and Splinter, K. D. M. (2022). Beach-face slope dataset for Australia. Earth System Science Data. volume 14, 3, p. 1345--1357. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-14-1345-2022
-
Vos, K., Harley, M.D., Turner, I.L. et al. Pacific shoreline erosion and accretion patterns controlled by El Niño/Southern Oscillation. Nature Geosciences. 16, 140–146 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-022-01117-8
-
Castelle B., Masselink G., Scott T., Stokes C., Konstantinou A., Marieu V., Bujan S. (2021). Satellite-derived shoreline detection at a high-energy meso-macrotidal beach. Geomorphology. volume 383, 107707. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2021.107707
-
Castelle, B., Ritz, A., Marieu, V., Lerma, A. N., & Vandenhove, M. (2022). Primary drivers of multidecadal spatial and temporal patterns of shoreline change derived from optical satellite imagery. Geomorphology, 413, 108360. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2022.10836
-
Konstantinou, A., Scott, T., Masselink, G., Stokes, K., Conley, D., & Castelle, B. (2023). Satellite-based shoreline detection along high-energy macrotidal coasts and influence of beach state. Marine Geology, 107082. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2023.107082
-
Time-series of shoreline change along the Pacific Rim (v1.4) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7758183
-
Time-series of shoreline change along the U.S. Atlantic coast: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9BQQTCI.
-
Time-series of shoreline change for the Klamath River Littoral Cell (California) (1.0) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7641757
-
Beach-face slope dataset for Australia (Version 2) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7272538
-
Training dataset used for pixel-wise classification in CoastSat (initial version): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3334147