How do we Know Human are Causing Climate Change?

Yet, no flooding not any decrease of the shorelines. Someone is lying.

Trend of high-tide flooding expected to occur for years to come, NOAA says

High-tide flooding expected to occur an average of between 45-70 days per year, agency says

High-tide flooding will continue to be a threat to coastal communities for years to come, NOAA announced during a media briefing held Tuesday.

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By: Scott Sutton , Meghan McRoberts
Aug 02, 2022

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — High-tide flooding will continue to be a threat to coastal communities for years to come, NOAA announced during a media briefing held Tuesday.
The phenomenon occurs when tides reach anywhere from 1.75 to 2 feet above the daily average high tide and start spilling onto streets or bubbling up from storm drains.

NOAA said that coastal communities in three locations along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts saw record high-tide flooding last year.

It is a trend that the agency expects will continue into 2023 and beyond without improved flood defense."..."

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Yet, no flooding not any decrease of the shorelines. Someone is lying.

Science

Rising Seas Are Flooding Norfolk Naval Base, and There’s No Plan to Fix It​

October 25, 2017


This story was co-published with The Weather Channel.

NORFOLK, Virginia—The one-story brick firehouse at Naval Station Norfolk sits pinched between a tidal inlet and Willoughby Bay. The station houses the first responders to any emergency at the neighboring airfield. Yet when a big storm hits or the tides surge, the land surrounding it floods. Even on a sunny day this spring, with the tide out, the field beside the firehouse was filled with water.

“It’s not supposed to be a pond,” said Joe Bouchard, a retired captain and former base commander. “It is now.”

Naval Station Norfolk, home to the Atlantic Fleet, floods not just in heavy rains or during hurricanes. It floods when the sun is shining, too, if the tide is high or the winds are right. It floods all the time.

“It is an impediment to the base accomplishing its mission,” Bouchard said."..."


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What does that have to do with anything? Without humans the CO2 was 6,000. So what if it's a mere 414 now? CO2 has nothing to do with any calamities in the past and in the future.
Really ? You’re that stupid ? That’s clear evidence idiot, that humans did not survive and evolve easily with such high co2 levels. Bubba, every statement you make supports co2 pollution.
 
Has there been any change with the coastal shorelines of America or any other country? How about low islands in the South Pacific? Nope! All a big hoax!
The graph doesn’t show changes in the shoreline foolish. It’s your graph. Tell us what the big label at the top says. Can you read it for us ?
 
Photos of cane storm surges are the only "evidence" the warmers have of rising seas...
 
They weren't built in flood zones.
All through S Florida (for one place)



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That's been happening forever when there are tropical storms. The concept that the shorelines should be gone started with Al Gore 30 years ago. Each 5 or 10 years, we keep getting the same scare tactic that the shorelines are going to be 20 feet under water.
 

Science

Rising Seas Are Flooding Norfolk Naval Base, and There’s No Plan to Fix It​

October 25, 2017


This story was co-published with The Weather Channel.
NORFOLK, Virginia—The one-story brick firehouse at Naval Station Norfolk sits pinched between a tidal inlet and Willoughby Bay. The station houses the first responders to any emergency at the neighboring airfield. Yet when a big storm hits or the tides surge, the land surrounding it floods. Even on a sunny day this spring, with the tide out, the field beside the firehouse was filled with water.

“It’s not supposed to be a pond,” said Joe Bouchard, a retired captain and former base commander. “It is now.”

Naval Station Norfolk, home to the Atlantic Fleet, floods not just in heavy rains or during hurricanes. It floods when the sun is shining, too, if the tide is high or the winds are right. It floods all the time.

“It is an impediment to the base accomplishing its mission,” Bouchard said."..."


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Historic tides at Sewells Point:​

  • Chesapeake-Potomac Hurricane (1933) -- 8.02 feet
  • Hurricane Isabel (2003) -- 7.89 feet
  • Nor'ida (2009) -- 7.73 feet
  • Hurricane Irene (2011) -- 7.56 feet
  • Ash Wednesday (1962) -- 7.22 feet
1933 was 8.02!!! Yikes!!! So, is it getting worse? Doesn't seem that way.
 
The graph doesn’t show changes in the shoreline foolish. It’s your graph. Tell us what the big label at the top says. Can you read it for us ?
Another tried to say Norfolk, Virginia was underwater because of the rising sea level. Yet, here are some stats that suggest before the large supposedly sea level changes the high tides and flooding were worse earlier in the 20th century.

Historic tides at Sewells Point:​

  • Chesapeake-Potomac Hurricane (1933) -- 8.02 feet
  • Hurricane Isabel (2003) -- 7.89 feet
  • Nor'ida (2009) -- 7.73 feet
  • Hurricane Irene (2011) -- 7.56 feet
  • Ash Wednesday (1962) -- 7.22 feet
Yikes!!! 1933 was 8.02 feet! Flooding for sure since the town is 7 feet above sea level and some of the town below sea level.
 
The graph doesn’t show changes in the shoreline foolish. It’s your graph. Tell us what the big label at the top says. Can you read it for us ?

Historic tides at Sewells Point:​

  • Chesapeake-Potomac Hurricane (1933) -- 8.02 feet
  • Hurricane Isabel (2003) -- 7.89 feet
  • Nor'ida (2009) -- 7.73 feet
  • Hurricane Irene (2011) -- 7.56 feet
  • Ash Wednesday (1962) -- 7.22 feet
 
Crick Poxy data mixed with temperature data will do that no matter what the data set is. you should go for a noble prize like Mike, you want to be like Mike right?
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Crick now show where this sea level rise has affected any coastal land anywhere. Go for it. Plymouth Rock, Florida coast, Statue of Liberty? why doesn't any of those places show fking one inch? What you posted is NASA mumbo jumbo soup. they calculate off of some mysterious ice loss height reading from a satellite. Don't they know that ice settles? holy shit, your trusted source has some critical issues.

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More:Fact check: Scientific consensus says humans are dominant cause of climate change

But the post ignores a basic element of how oceans work: tides.

USA TODAY reached out to the poster for further comment.

The origin of the photos

The images depict a strip of land with water on both sides.

Tides, TIDES is there argument, holy fk, wow, you are truly ignorant to the world.
 
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That's been happening forever when there are tropical storms. The concept that the shorelines should be gone started with Al Gore 30 years ago. Each 5 or 10 years, we keep getting the same scare tactic that the shorelines are going to be 20 feet under water.
NO.
It's Seasonal and getting WORSE by the Year.
Not storms.
I live on the SE Coast of Florida, and my little city, like most, has worse floods yearly and builds ever higher concrete walls.
The flooding is mostly due to Sea Level, and happens adjacent to the rising Inland Waterway, not ocean.

BTW, F-U you lying clown.
You've gotten destroyed on every point.
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NO.
It's Seasonal and getting WORSE by the Year.
Not storms.
I live on the SE Coast of Florida, and my little city, like most, has worse floods yearly and builds ever higher concrete walls.
The flooding is mostly due to Sea Level, and happens adjacent to the rising Inland Waterway, not ocean.

BTW, F-U you lying clown.
You've gotten destroyed on every point.
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there simply is no argument to such nonsense. That sir is the worlds greatest word salad of nothing!!!!!

might as well just said, but, but, but, but and gone about your business.
 

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