4.7 Article

Identification of storm events and contiguous coastal sections for deterministic modeling of extreme coastal flood events in response to climate change

Journal

COASTAL ENGINEERING
Volume 140, Issue -, Pages 316-330

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2018.08.003

Keywords

Coastal storm cells; Dynamical downscaling; Global climate models; K-means clustering; Southern California

Funding

  1. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Coastal and Marine Geology Program
  2. California State Coastal Conservancy
  3. California Department of Fish and Wildlife
  4. Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve
  5. NOAA Coastal and Ocean Climate Applications (COCA) program [NA15OAR4310243]

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Deterministic dynamical modeling of future climate conditions and associated hazards, such as flooding, can be computationally-expensive if century-long time-series of waves, sea level variations, and overland flow patterns are simulated. To alleviate some of the computational costs, local impacts of individual coastal storms can be explored by first identifying particular events or scenarios of interest and dynamically modeling those events in detail. In this study, an efficient approach to selecting storm events for subsequent deterministic detailed modeling of coastal flooding is presented. The approach identifies locally relevant scenarios derived from regional datasets spanning long time-periods and covering large geographic areas. This is done by identifying storm events from global climate models using a robust, yet computationally simple approach for calculating total water level proxies at the shore, assuming a linear superposition of the important processes contributing to the overall total water level. Clustering of the total water level time-series is used to define coherent coastal cells where similar return period water level extrema occur in response to region-wide storms. Results show that the more severe but rare coastal flood events (e.g., the 100-year (yr) event) typically occur from the same storm across the region, but that a number of different storms are responsible for the less severe but more frequent local extreme water levels (e.g., the 1-yr event). This new 'storm selection' approach is applied to the Southern California Bight, a region of varying shoreline orientations that is subject to wave refraction across complex bathymetry, and shadowing, focusing, diffraction, and dissipation of wave energy by islands. Results indicate that wave runup dominates total water level extremes at this study site, highlighting the importance of down scaling global-scale models to nearshore waves when seeking accurate projections of local coastal hazards in response to climate change.

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