Real Science

Storm Surge At The Other End Of The Hockey Stick

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Sandy’s storm surge was 13 feet, due largely to a full moon high tide. Leading climate experts blamed this on global warming.

At the other end of the hockey stick, a 1900 hurricane killed 10,000 people and produced a 20 foot storm surge.

The water rose at a steady rate from 3 p.m. until about 7:30 p.m., when there was a sudden rise of about four feet in as many seconds. I was standing at my front door, which was partly open, watching the water, which was flowing with great rapidity from east to west. The water at this time was about eight inches deep in my residence, and the sudden rise of 4 feet brought it above my waist before I could change my position. The water had now reached a stage 10 feet above the ground at Rosenberg Avenue (Twenty-fifth street) and Q street, where my residence stood. The ground was 5.2 feet elevation, which made the tide 15.2 feet. The tide rose the next hour, between 7:30 and 8:30 p.m., nearly five feet additional, making a total tide in that locality of about twenty feet.

1900 Galveston Hurricane 

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