Discovery Channel Canada features Wave Robber coastal erosion project

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The work of an inventor and researchers at the Ā鶹AV to combat coastal erosion is gaining notice in a place far north of the Louisiana shorelineā€”Canada.

Earlier this month, Discovery Channel Canada aired a segment about the Wave Robber. Itā€™s designed to break up waves, and deposit the sediment carried in the water along the coastline.

Webster Pierce, from the coastal town of Cut Off, La., holds a patent on the wave suppression/sediment collection device. Researchers at Ā鶹AV are studying its design, efficiency and commercial viability.

The Wave Robber, which is made of durable, UV-resistant plastic, resembles a small set of stairs, with pipes running through it. Anchored to the seafloor, it breaks up waves, absorbing their energy. The interior pipes ā€œrobā€ the waves of sediment, which is deposited behind the Wave Robber

A team of researchers led by Dr. Daniel Gang, a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering, is testing the device in the laboratory and in the field.

The research is being conducted with scale models set up inside a 1,000-gallon tank, and with full-size version of the Wave Robber installed along the shoreline near Cut Off in November 2012.

The can be viewed on Discovery Channel Canada website.

Photo: Dr. Daniel Gang, who is leading a team of University researchers on the Wave Robber project to combat coastal erosion, is shown talking to a TV crew with Discovery Channel Canada in November.