My daughter was in Yorktown, VA, next to a slough off the river. They had several inches of rain and the tide water came within feet of their house. They've since moved a bit further inland. HSV used to have a problem with flooding around the low area next to the Governors Drive/Parkway intersection. They channelized and concreted the creek there and there was drop to the river, so that seemed to solve the problem until about 20 years ago, when there was a flood in south HSV on Aldridge Creek. They bought/condemned all the homes and turned it into a greenway. So far, the remedies have worked...Massive flooding from rain and high tide -- +9.4 feet -- which is the 4th largest of recorded tides in Charleston. Up to 11 inches of rain in some areas. 30 downtown streets closed due to flooding -- most of the water came up through the drainage system as the tides rose.
Oof.Massive flooding from rain and high tide -- +9.4 feet -- which is the 4th largest of recorded tides in Charleston. Up to 11 inches of rain in some areas. 30 downtown streets closed due to flooding -- most of the water came up through the drainage system as the tides rose.
Oof.
One of my chirruns flew home through Charlotte (American Airlines) yesterday and I wondered how that storm might impact the flight. Flightaware showed them detour the flightpath to avoid the nasty stuff on the way in but AA landed and took off as if everything was normal.
Europe would instantly become uninhabitable. Russia would become an arctic wasteland...in other news
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Atlantic Ocean circulation nearing ‘devastating’ tipping point, study finds
Collapse in system of currents that helps regulate global climate would be at such speed that adaptation would be impossiblewww.theguardian.com
And we’d have more hurricanes to reject heat from middle to upper latitudesEurope would instantly become uninhabitable. Russia would become an arctic wasteland...
Opinion: I’m a climate scientist. If you knew what I know, you’d be terrified too
www.thecooldown.com