Saturday, November 28, 2015

Climate Change is real for a climate scientist – more coastal flooding in Norfolk

See the article at the link below for informative graphs.

http://www.wunderground.com/blog/lpaocean/climate-change-is-real-for-this-blogger--more-coastal-flooding-in-n

Larry Atkinson is the Slover Professor of Oceanography at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. He studies sea level rise and other processes.

By: Dr Larry P. Atkinson , 11:01 PM GMT on November 27, 2015

Hi. I’m Larry Atkinson and I live in Norfolk, Virginia. I, like many people living in coastal areas, am personally experiencing the effects of climate change. The ocean is rising and there are many days when I have to figure out which road to take to work at Old Dominion University’s Climate Change and Sea Level Rise Initiative. These are not just any roads but Federal highways that almost 100,000 personnel who work at the Norfolk Naval Base must also use. So for us climate change is now a matter of adapting to it. We can’t talk about preventing it: it is too late for that. Minor street flooding that used to occur 10’s of hours per year 50 years ago now occurs 50 to 100 hours per year or more. It may be called ‘minor’ but driving through salt water is not good!

I’ve been studying the ocean for over 50 years and before that I was a commercial salmon fisherman during my high school and college years in Bellingham, Washington. I’ve spent months on the ocean off the east and west coasts of the US, off Chile, Japan, Spain and on long ocean research campaigns in the North and South Atlantic Ocean, the Pacific, and the Antarctic. I’ve studies methane in the ocean, gas exchange, Gulf Stream and Kuroshio Current dynamics, effects of cold air outbreaks off the SE US, aquaculture in Spain, effects of oil and gas exploration, offshore wind energy, and more that I’ve forgotten. And now I’m studying sea level rise with colleagues and more importantly studying how we figure out how fast the ocean is rising and how we can adapt to it. And that is what this blog will focus on.

These data are from Norfolk but the same story holds for just about any low lying coastal area.
Because of the very low topography of these coastal areas a small rise in sea level results in more hours of some area experiencing flooding.

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