Patterns and Projections of High Tide Flooding along the U.S. Coastline Using a Common Impact Threshold.
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Date
2018Author
Sweet, W.V
Dusek, G
Obeysekera, J
Marra, J.J
Status
PublishedPages
44pp.
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Show full item recordAbstract
For forecasting purposes to ensure public safety, NOAA has established three coastal flood severity
thresholds. The thresholds are
based upon water level heights empirically calibrated to NOAA tide gauge
measurement
s from years of impact monitoring by its Weather Forecast
Offices (WFO) and emergency
managers. When
minor
(more
disruptive
than damaging),
moderate
(damaging) or
major
(destructive)
coastal flooding is anticipated (not associated with tropical storms), NOAA issues either a flood
advisory
(for minor) or
warning
(for moderate or major). L
ess than half of NOAA tide gauges located along the
U.S. coastline have such ‘official’ NOAA flood thresholds, and where they exist, the heights can vary
substantially (e.g., 0.3
–0.6 m
eter
within minor category). They
differ due to the extent of
infrastructure
vulnerabilities, which vary by topography and relief
, land
-cover types or existing flood defenses.
We find that all officia.....
Publisher
NOAA, NOS Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and ServicesSilver Spring, MD
Series;Nr
NOAA Technical Report NOS CO-OPS;086Document Language
enBest Practice Type
Best PracticeGuide
Citation
Sweet, W.V.; Duseket, G.; Obeysekera, J. and Marra, J.J. (2018) Patterns and Projections of High Tide Flooding Along the U.S. Coastline Using a Common Impact Threshold. Silver Spring, MD, NOAA NOS Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services, 44pp. (NOAA Technical Report NOS CO-OPS 086), DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-128Collections
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