Abstract
Abstract
Like many coastal communities throughout the Mid-Atlantic region, relative sea level rise and accelerating instances of coastal nuisance flooding are having a tangible negative impact on economic activity and infrastructure in Annapolis, MD. The drivers of coastal nuisance flooding, in general, are a superposition of global, regional, and local influences that occur across spatial and temporal scales that determine water levels relative to a coastal datum. Most of the research to date related to coastal flooding has been focused on high impact episodic events, decomposing the global and regional drivers of sea level rise, or assessing seasonal to interannual trends in. In this study, we focus specifically on the role of short-duration (hours) meteorological wind forcing on water level anomalies in Annapolis, MD. Annapolis is an ideal location to study these processes because of the orientation of the coast relative to the prevailing wind directions, and the long record of reliable data observations. Our results suggest that three-, six-, nine-, and twelve-hour sustained wind forcing significantly influences water level anomalies in Annapolis. Sustained wind forcing out of the northeast, east, southeast and south is associated with positive water level anomalies, and sustained wind forcing out of the northwest and north is associated with negative water level anomalies. While these observational results suggest a relationship between sustained wind forcing and water level anomalies, a more robust approach is needed to account for other meteorological variables and drivers that occur across a variety of spatial and temporal scales.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
3 articles.
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