
The surroundings of the Outer Banks are located about 90 miles from Qarov in a 4-wheel drive on the border of North Carolina and Virginia in the northern county of Curitac, right up to the village of Hatteras, on the southern tip of Dar County and the ever-changing beach. Two spots do not match, and the same place is never the same.
We are a barrier island, which is a land mass, which by definition is moving. He is migrating. The sand blown off the beach supposedly travels in the wind and is deposited on the western side (“sound”) of the island to create land there; thus creating small sandy islands dotted with sound.
Similarly, ocean overflow should not stop at the dune line, but rather be transported to the island and wash into the sound ... or make it partly on land and dry out, leaving vegetation that is rich in bio-fertilizer fertilizers for feeding, which keeps in the wind for drifting sandy lumps.
Another factor in the movement of our beaches is that we are in the Atlantic Ocean as it approaches the Gulf Stream and the Labrador Current. Our prevailing winds and constantly southerly currents cause erosion even on calm days. Thus, sand is continuously transported to the south with the ebb of waves, which extremely creates a “jagged” effect on the coastline - sand, washed out from the coastline to the north, descends downstream and deposits on the beach further south. When sand accumulates, it is called accretion - the opposite of erosion. And this cycle continues on the coast.
Each area of the shoreline of the External Banks is distinguished by a different rate of erosion. There are cards that show these different bets.
The main four areas of the Outer Banks, which experience the highest natural erosion of the seaboard, from north to south are the northern duck, Kitty Hawk, South Nags Head and Rodanthe. There are other small pockets of some erosion on a high beach between these four areas, but they are usually the worst. Part of Pine Island in the South Corolla is one of the areas, and many say that shipwrecks offshore create irregular wave patterns that actually “chew on” the beach worse than natural waves / current patterns, for example, near MP 6 of Kill Devil Hills.
If you have seen the ocean island of Kitty Hawk, you will notice something missing - an uninterrupted row of houses by the ocean. Over the years, many have eroded; in some areas of Kitty Hawk there is not enough land on which to build houses.
In the summer of 2011, the $ 36 million Beach Nourishment program was implemented in Nags Head, which has so far been successful in creating a wider beach. Only time will tell how long the sand will remain. There are skeptics and proponents on both sides of the hotly argued question. This is the only project for the reconstruction of the beach, which was planned or held on the entire ocean coast.
South Nags Head has the largest number of washing machines in recent years (often on television and online now) due to the higher density of initial planning / zoning, which allows it to be built in small areas and closer to the average high water mark.
Probably the most dramatic and publicly visible ocean erosion is the beach in Rodanthe, the northernmost village of Hatteras Island, which was made at the national level by Richard Gere / Diane Lane's “Nights in Rodanthe”, which featured popular Serendipity. The house shown in the film was the northernmost house on the entire island of Hatteras, a period until it was forced to be moved by Dar's county, because the erosion was so bad that the housing actually sat on public lands. The resulting northernmost house — the old neighbor of the Serendipity — was washed away by the 2011 Irene hurricane.
Oceanfront dwellings with mortgage or insured mortgages are necessary to cover floods, regardless of the height of the plot. The ocean is usually considered a VO or VE Flood zone, which basically means that there is a probability of 100 years of flooding along with the danger of wave speed.
When an ocean party is too badly undermined, it becomes irrelevant; if this happens, the owner cannot be allowed by the county or city to restore it exactly as it exists now, if it was to be burned or washed away by the ocean.

