1. Ache, B. W., Crossett, K. M., Pacheco, P. A., Adkins, J. E., & Wiley, P. C. (2013). “The coast” is complicated: a model to consistently describe the nation’s coastal population. Estuaries and Coasts. doi: 10.1007/s12237-013-9629-9 .
2. Adams, C. M., Hernandez, E., & Cato, J. C. (2004). The economic significance of the Gulf of Mexico related to population, income, employment, minerals, fisheries and shipping. Ocean and Coastal Management, 47, 565–580.
3. Brazdil, P.B., Soares, C. (2003). A comparison of ranking methods for classification algorithm selection. In Proceedings of 11th European Conference on Machine Learning . Springer Verlag, Volume 1810, 2000, pp 63–75.
4. Brown, S., Nicholls, RJ., Vafeidis, A., Hinkel, J., Watkiss, P. (2011). The impacts and economic costs of sea-level rise in Europe and the costs and benefits of adaptation. Summary of results from the EC RTD ClimateCost Project. In Watkiss, P (Editor), 2011. The ClimateCost Project. Final report. Volume 1: Europe. Published by the Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden, 2011. ISBN 978-91-86125-35-6.
5. Colgan, C. S. (2013). The ocean economy of the United States: measurement, distribution, trends. Ocean and Coastal Management, 71(2013), 334e343.