OzCoasts (2018 – 2024)

January 1st, 2018

The CSIRO Coastal Informatics Team hosted the OzCoasts website at a URL of https://ozcoasts.org.au from 2018 until 2024.

Screenshot of the OzCoasts website landing page circa 2024

Screenshot of the OzCoasts landing page

Screenshot of the OzCoasts website landing page circa 2024

About OzCoasts

OzCoasts was a publicly accessible website which provided comprehensive information about Australia’s coasts (including its estuaries and coastal waterways) to natural resource managers, marine scientists, planners, policy makers and the general public. This information was intended to help generate a better understanding of Australia’s coastal environments. The content of OzCoasts represented the collaborative efforts of more than 100 coastal scientists from a wide range of government agencies and universities.

OzCoasts History

2000 – 2007: OzEstuaries

The website that became OzCoasts was originally called OzEstuaries with domain name of ozestuaries.org, and was developed during the first National Land and Water Resources Audit (NLWRA, 2000) to incorporate the Australian Estuarine Database and estuarine datasets compiled at that time.

In 2003, the OzEstuaries site was upgraded by Geoscience Australia in partnership with the Coastal Co-operative Research Centre (Coastal CRC), to incorporate the conceptual models of ecosystem function and the coastal indicator and issue fact sheets, and subsequently in February 2006 with the addition of new datasets, images, research documents and 3D visualisations of coastal benthic environments.

2007 – 2008: OzCoasts Launch

In May 2007, the content of the OzCoast module at the former Coastal CRC website was merged into OzEstuaries in the format of an Environmental Management module and the site underwent a name change to OzCoast and OzEstuaries with domain name of ozcoasts.org.au. The site was hosted and maintained by GeoScience Australia.

The site was re-released under the name OzCoasts in July 2008 as part of a second collaborative project with the NLWRA that saw the addition of a new NRM reporting module to the site. The OzCoasts website was formally launched on August 20, 2008 during the Coast to Coast conference in Darwin.  It was hosted and maintained at that time by GeoScience Australia.

2008 – 2012: Interactive Coastal Modelling Tools

Over the next few years, a number of interactive coastal modelling tools and modules were added to the OzCoasts Platform, also hosted and maintained by GA:

The Landform & Stability Maps module incorporating the smartline maps was released in June 2009: The module was developed through a partnership between Geoscience Australia and the Federal Department of Climate Change that also included the University of Tasmania and Surf Life Saving Australia.

At the same time, conceptual models of major beach types were added to the website, and the Geomorphology & Geology module underwent a name-change to Habitat Mapping. The beach conceptual models were developed as part of the Australian Beach Safety and Management Program (ABSAMP), which was a long-term collaborative project between the University of Sydney and Surf Life saving Australia.

At the conclusion of 2009, the contents of the Environmental Management and the NRM Reporting modules were merged, and the combined module was renamed Natural Resource Management.

2010 saw the release of a two new beach searches (name and spatial), and a climate change module. The beach content was developed in collaboration with Professor Andrew Short (University of Sydney) and Surf Life Saving Australia. The climate change module was developed in collaboration with the former Ferderal Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency.

The Tropical Rivers Module was released in March 2012. It was developed in partnership with the Griffith University node of the Tropical Rivers and Coastal Knowledge (TRaCK) consortium and Boab Interactive.

Geoscience Australia web-developed the Coastal Eutrophication Risk Assessment Tool (CERAT) for the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage and released it in early November 2012.

2018: Redevelopment of the OzCoasts Website

In June 2018, the OzCoasts website was redeveloped with the aim of making the main website a community resource with content provided and authored by coastal experts around Australia.

The bulk of the site moved to new infrastructure which was maintained by CSIRO at the ozcoasts.org.au domain, while the  interactive modules remained hosted by GeoScience Australia at ozcoasts.gov.au

The content of the site was to be maintained by the CSIRO, Geoscience Australia and the National Estuaries Network with contributions from many others.   Spatial data services that had been associated with the decommissioned Australian Coastal Ecosystems Facility of TERN were moved to the OzCoasts domain in order to remain available to the public.

2020: Decommissioning of Interactive Modules

In August 2020, GeoScience Australia made the decision to decommission the OzCoasts Coastal Eutrophication Risk Assessment Tool (CERAT) and other interactive OzCoasts modules as they were technically obsolete, and required old versions of infrastructure that GA were no longer able to support.    The CSIRO OzCoasts team attempted to obtain funding to modernise and relaunch these tools, but were not successful, and so sections of the main OzCoasts website that linked to these tools were disabled.

2024: Decommissioning of the OzCoasts Website

In 2024, CSIRO funding for the hosting and maintenance of the OzCoasts website ceased, and the site was taken offline in November 2024, with the spatial data services expected to follow shortly afterward.

If you require information about any content that was previously hosted on the OzCoasts website, you are welcome to contact us using the link on this website, and we will do our best to discover that information for you.  You may also be able to access at least some of the OzCoasts content via the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.