Wednesday, September 5, 2012

USGS continues to monitor flooding along Isaac’s path and drought conditions elsewhere

US Geological Survey: The worst of the storm may be over, but Isaacs’s impacts on the Gulf coastline and the potential for inland flooding continue. While precipitation continues to affect states in the storm track, drought conditions persist in many other parts of the country.

Over the next few days, USGS will send crews into the field to assess flooding, gather high water marks, and begin to collect and analyze data from storm surge sensors deployed prior to Hurricane Isaac’s landfall. USGS will also conduct aerial surveys along the Gulf’s coastline to photograph coastal change from the storm’s waves and currents.

....Several southern states have experienced significant flooding as a result of rains from Hurricane Isaac. Multiple USGS field crews from several states are recording high-water marks, collecting discharge measurements and obtaining water quality data in coastal and inland Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. This information is important because it is used by the National Weather Service to issue flood warnings, and the data is also used by emergency responders and planners to mitigate current and future flood hazards. These crews are being augmented by USGS staff from the Georgia Water Science Center. As the storm continues to move, crews from Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri and Arkansas remain ready to address flooding along the storm’s track.

USGS field crews have also begun retrieving the 170 storm surge sensors and 17 temporary real-time gages that were deployed in response to Hurricane Isaac in locations where the storm has passed. Data from these sensors networks will be uploaded to the USGS Hurricane Storm Tide Sensor Map.  The sensors provide critical data for more accurate modeling and prediction capabilities and allows for improved structure designs and response for public safety.

A new technology is being used by the USGS to map flooding in certain urban areas caused by the hurricane. Called terrestrial lidar, or T-lidar, this new capability is being deployed by scientists from the USGS to collect highly-detailed information in select population areas where the storm had the greatest impact in Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi. The USGS has not previously used T-lidar for flood work....

Jackson Avenue in New Orleans, after Isaac, shot by dsb nola, Wikimedia Commons via Flickr, under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license

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