When storm surge and heavy precipitation co-occur, the potential for flooding in low-lying coastal areas is often much greater than from either in isolation. Knowing the probability of these compound events and understanding the processes driving them is essential to mitigate the associated high-impact risks1, 2. Here we determine the likelihood of joint occurrence of these two phenomena for the contiguous United States (US) and show that the risk of compound flooding is higher for the Atlantic/Gulf coast relative to the Pacific coast. We also provide evidence that the number of compound events has increased significantly over the past century at many of the major coastal cities. Long-term sea-level rise is the main driver for accelerated f...
Coastal flooding can be caused by both heavy rainfall and/or anomalously high tides. Currently most ...
In low-lying coastal regions, flooding arises from oceanographic (storm surges plus tides and/or wav...
Coastal compound flooding events occur when extreme events of rainfall, river discharge and sea leve...
When storm surge and heavy precipitation co-occur, the potential for flooding in low-lying coastal a...
Compound flooding arises from storms causing concurrent extreme meteorological tides (that is the su...
In low-lying coastal areas, the co-occurrence of high sea level and precipitation resulting in large...
Compound flood raised from the concurrent heavy precipitation and storm surge receives increasing at...
Coastal flooding from storm surge is one of the most dangerous and damaging natural hazards that soc...
The interaction between storm surge and concurrent precipitation is poorly understood in many coasta...
The vulnerability of urban populations to natural hazards and climate change is a major theme in man...
With dense population and development along its coastline, the northeastern United States is, at pre...
Coastal flood risk assessments typically ignore interannual to multidecadal variability stemming fro...
In a changing climate, future inundation of the United States’ Atlantic coast will depend on both st...
Coastal flooding can be caused by both heavy rainfall and/or anomalously high tides. Currently most ...
In low-lying coastal regions, flooding arises from oceanographic (storm surges plus tides and/or wav...
Coastal compound flooding events occur when extreme events of rainfall, river discharge and sea leve...
When storm surge and heavy precipitation co-occur, the potential for flooding in low-lying coastal a...
Compound flooding arises from storms causing concurrent extreme meteorological tides (that is the su...
In low-lying coastal areas, the co-occurrence of high sea level and precipitation resulting in large...
Compound flood raised from the concurrent heavy precipitation and storm surge receives increasing at...
Coastal flooding from storm surge is one of the most dangerous and damaging natural hazards that soc...
The interaction between storm surge and concurrent precipitation is poorly understood in many coasta...
The vulnerability of urban populations to natural hazards and climate change is a major theme in man...
With dense population and development along its coastline, the northeastern United States is, at pre...
Coastal flood risk assessments typically ignore interannual to multidecadal variability stemming fro...
In a changing climate, future inundation of the United States’ Atlantic coast will depend on both st...
Coastal flooding can be caused by both heavy rainfall and/or anomalously high tides. Currently most ...
In low-lying coastal regions, flooding arises from oceanographic (storm surges plus tides and/or wav...
Coastal compound flooding events occur when extreme events of rainfall, river discharge and sea leve...