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Natural versus Altered Landcover within 100 km of a Coastline |
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![]() ![]() Map Projection Interrupted Goode's Homolosine Map Description The level of human alteration of landscape within coastal zone is shown in this map. Excluding Antarctica, 19 percent of all lands within 100 km of the coast are classified as "altered," meaning they are in agricultural or urban uses; 10 percent are classified as "semialtered," involving a mosaic of natural and altered vegetation; and 71 percent fall within the "natural" or least modified category, meaning that the natural habitat remains. This 71 percent includes large uninhabited areas of the world, mostly in northern latitudes. As shown here, the terrestrial coastal area surrounding the Black Sea, Mediterranean, and South Asia regions have the highest percentage of altered lands, while the coastal zone of the Arctic, Northeast Pacific, South Pacific, West and Central Africa, East Africa, Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, and Kuwait regions have the highest proportion of least modified landcover. |
Citation: World Resources Institute - PAGE, 2000 Sources:
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