4.7 Article

Yesterday & apos;s High Tide Is Today & apos;s New Normal

Journal

EARTHS FUTURE
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2023EF003774

Keywords

sea-level rise; climate change; coastal impacts; high-tide flooding

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Due to sea-level rise, the highest, lowest, and average water levels experienced by coastal communities in the United States no longer correspond to the official definitions of high tide, low tide, and mean sea level. Water levels now regularly exceed official high tide along certain parts of the Chesapeake Bay, Gulf Coast, and Puerto Rico, indicating a radical redefinition of the American shore caused by sea-level rise.
The daily rise and fall of the tides are intimately familiar to those living on the coast. However, due to sea-level rise, what communities in the United States now experience as the highest, lowest, and average water levels on a typical day no longer corresponds to the official definitions of high tide, low tide, and mean sea level, respectively. Water levels now regularly exceed official high tide along parts of the Chesapeake Bay, Gulf Coast, and Puerto Rico. In other words, yesterday's high tide is becoming today's new normal. This demonstrates how sea-level rise is radically redefining the American shore.

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