Major
Coastal Flooding, Hurricane-Force Wind Gusts Expected From Friday's
Nor'easter
1 March, 2018
Evacuations
of the coast are already
being recommended along
vulnerable areas of Massachusetts’ Cape Cod Bay, as a developing
low-pressure system centered over Indiana on Thursday morning heads
towards New England. The storm was bringing a swath of accumulating
snow to southern lower Michigan, where up to 9” is expected. By
Thursday night, when the low will be in western Pennsylvania, the
system will undergo a complex interaction with a short-wave trough of
low pressure to its north, resulting in the formation of a secondary
area of low pressure--a nor’easter--off of the Northeast U.S.
coast. This nor’easter will intensify dramatically to about a 975
mb central pressure on Friday, bringing a wide range of hazards to
New England. Heavy rains of 2 – 3” in Rhode Island and Southeast
Massachusetts will bring river flooding; heavy wet snows in excess of
one foot in the higher elevations of New England will cause power
outages; wind gusts in excess of 60 mph will affect the coasts of
Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, with hurricane-force
wind gusts of 75 mph expected to occur on Cape Cod; and a storm surge
of up to 4’ (with 25 - 35-foot waves) will cause major coastal
flooding and erosion along the coast of eastern Massachusetts. A
lesser storm surge of 2 – 3’ will affect the coasts of New
Hampshire and Maine, causing mostly moderate flooding.
According
to NOAA,
there is a 1% chance per year that Boston will see coastal flooding
in excess of 4.59’ above Mean Higher High Water, MHHW (a
1-in-100-year event). A flood of this magnitude already occurred once
this year, on January 4, when Winter Storm Grayson brought a top-five
highest storm tide on record to the coast from Boston to
Central Maine. Boston saw its highest water level on record, 4.88’
above MHHW. The NWS in Boston is
predicting a storm surge of 2.5 – 3.5 feet during the time
of high tide on Friday and Saturday. Exacerbating the event will be
the highest tides of the month—more than a foot above
average--associated with the full moon. The combined effect of the
storm surge and the unusually high astronomical tide is predicted to
bring a water level among the top-three highest ever measured, about
4.5’ above MHHW. Thus, this weekend’s storm surge may well give
Boston a second 1-in-100-year coastal flooding event, something one
would expect to see randomly only once every 10,000 years!
Figure 1. Predicted storm surge coastal flooding for the Friday – Saturday period from the coming nor’easter. Image credit: NWS Boston. |
Figure 2. Predicted maximum significant wave height for the 3-day period ending on March 3, 2018, from the SWAN wave model (driven by winds from the NAM model). Waves in excess of 30 feet are expected offshore from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and in excess of 25 feet offshore from Boston. Image credit: CERA. |
Two 1-in-100-year coastal flooding events in one year for Boston
Figure 3. Predicted water levels in Boston due to the combined effects of the tide and storm surge (black line with “X” marks), along with the expected water level due just to the tide (blue line), using a storm surge model driven by the 6Z Thursday, March 1, 2018 winds from the GFS model. The difference between the black curve and the blue curve is the storm surge (gold line). MLLW, MSL, MHHW, and MAT stand for Mean Lower Low Water, Mean Sea Level, Mean Higher High Water, and Maximum Astronomical Tide. MAT is the maximum tide that will occur in a 19-year span, and there is probably flooding if the total water level crosses MAT. Boston is predicted to see a storm tide about 4 – 4.5’ above MHHW, which would be the third highest water level ever recorded there. Fortunately, it appears the highest storm surge of 4’ will arrive at low tide, or else Boston would see an all-time record water level. The record high water level was set earlier this year--4.88’ above MHHW on January 4, 2018 (previous record 4.82’ on 2/7/1978 during the infamous Blizzard of ’78). Boston’s period of record (POR) extends back to 1921. Image credit: NWS. |
A long-duration and large-scale nor’easter
Unfortunately,
a strong and slow-moving ridge of high pressure (a “blocking high”)
over Greenland, which has brought an incredible
flow of warm air northwards into the Arctic with
above-freezing temperatures at the North Pole, will keep this
weekend’s nor’easter from making much progress eastward. As a
result, the Northeast U.S. coast will receive a punishing assault
from a large storm surge and high waves that will last through three
high tide cycles.
In
Eastern Massachusetts, the worst flooding is expected to occur during
the high tide cycles near 11 am Friday, 11 pm Friday and 12 pm
Saturday, when waves of 25 – 35 feet are possible just offshore.
This stretch of coast is unusually vulnerable to erosion, thanks to
the terrific pounding wrought by the storm surge and wave action of
Winter Storm Grayson on January 4. In one case, Winter Storm Grayson
helped wash away 60 – 75% of 110,000 cubic yards of sand added
in 2016 to Town Neck Beach (about
40 miles southeast of Boston). This leaves the beach highly
vulnerable to a renewed assault by this weekend’s storm.
From weather.com’s write-up
of the impacts of this nor’easter: On Long
Island,
New York, coastal flooding could result in numerous road closures and
could flood homes, business, and parking lots near the coast.
In Manasquan,
New Jersey,
Saturday morning's storm tide could reach levels that begin to flood
the first floor of low-lying homes and businesses, levels only topped
the past 25 years by Hurricane Irene (2011), the December 1992
Nor'easter, and Superstorm Sandy (2012).
Flooding
Saturday morning may approach levels that typically produce
widespread flooding of roads and some structural damage in New
Jersey’s Atlantic
and Ocean Counties, Ocean
City and Somers Point, Wildwood
Crest, Cape May and West Cape May, New Jersey,
and in Delaware’s Kent
and Sussex Counties,
according to the National Weather Service.
Moderate
to major coastal flooding is possible in the Virginia Tidewater,
including the Norfolk metro
area, Saturday morning, evening, and even Sunday morning.
In
the Outer
Banks of North Carolina,
oceanside and soundside flooding Saturday into Sunday may inundate
stretches of Highway 12 near times of high tide.
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