Hurricanes aren't the only hazard lapping at the shores of the Outer Banks, according to a report examining the threat of climate change on some of the country's most beloved natural landscapes.

Thanks to creeping sea levels and erosion rates, Cape Hatteras National Seashore made the list.

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“One of the most imminent threats to the Cape Hatteras National Seashore is to the natural habitat it protects," the Landslide 2019 report reads. "As sea level rises, erosion rates increase and the natural habitat between the ocean and the waterfront properties decreases."

The report is a product of The Cultural Landscape Foundation, or TCLF, a nonprofit dedicated to the stewardship of those landscapes, that started in 2003.

Jonathan B. Jarvis, the former director of the National Park Service, wrote its introduction.

“As you read through TCLF's annual Landslide and lament the loss of irreplaceable cultural and historical sites, get angry and then get busy,” he said. “The planet needs you.”

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Cape Hatteras is one of three national parks at the Outer Banks — which is projected to see the highest sea level rise by 2100, according to a National Park Service study cited in the report.

At the current rate, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said sea levels there are rising 4.69 millimeters yearly.

That’s roughly 1.5 feet in a century.

That has widespread consequences for Cape Hatteras, where beaches are being devoured, historic structures are under siege and visitor access is impeded — including the area around the Ocracoke Island Ferry terminal, according to the Landslide 2019 report.

What’s more alarming? “The landscape is deeply and directly connected to the local economy,” the report states.

Roughly 3.2 million people reportedly visited national parks at the Outer Banks last year. Those visitors passed $203.1 million in revenue to neighboring communities and provided nearly 3,000 jobs for locals, reaping a combined benefit for the local economy of $255.4 million, according to the report.

But TCLF said officials at the park service and in local government are working on fixes.

The Nature Conservancy's Coastal Resilience project has offered some natural solutions "including protecting or restoring area salt marshes as buffers and designing restored oyster reefs to serve as breakwaters," the report states.

All three parks have also partnered with the nonprofit Outer Banks Forever to update their management plans with a better emphasis on the effects of rising sea levels.