New
York City Peak Threat Hours: 7-10 PM, When Sandy May "Partially"
Flood The Subway System
29
October, 2012
As
meteorologists have been repeating all day, the biggest threat for
NYC is not so much the rain, or even the wind, dangling cranes
hundreds of feet above ground notwithstanding, but the storm surge.
The
threat here is that Hurricane Sandy will hit land just as the tide
comes in, resulting in a double whammy which Wunderground has called
a "gigantic bulge of water that will raise waters levels to
the highest storm tides ever seen in over a century of record
keeping."
Add
to this the impact of the full moon, which means that high tide will
be 5% higher than average for the month, and Wunderground's
conclusion is inevitable: "This
is a higher destructive potential than any hurricane observed since
1969, including Category 5 storms like Katrina, Rita, Wilma, Camille,
and Andrew... Sandy's
storm surge will be capable of overtopping the flood walls in
Manhattan, which are only five feet above mean sea level."
How
high are we talking: Sandy's
storm surge will be capable of overtopping the flood walls in
Manhattan, which are only five feet above mean sea level...
According
to the latest storm surge forecast for NYC from NHC, Sandy's storm
surge is expected to be 10 - 12' above MLLW. Since a storm tide of
10.5' is needed to flood the subway system, it
appears likely that portions of the NYC subway system will flood."
Luckily
for all, the NY Fed's tungsten gold,
which is 50 feet below
sea level (and
80 feet below the surface) and is in the Zone C flood evacuation
area, will be perfectly "safe." And after all tungsten gold
will never just float away.
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