Breaking News: Floods

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Newswise: Flood Recover Research Poised to Help Residents in Flood-Prone Areas of Central Appalachia
Released: 4-Dec-2023 4:05 PM EST
Flood Recover Research Poised to Help Residents in Flood-Prone Areas of Central Appalachia
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

Dr. Jamie Shinn is overseeing the development of an online resource – the West Virginia Flood Resilience Framework – poised to help residents in flood-prone areas of central Appalachia become better prepared to recover from flooding through accessible information on flood risk, floodplain management, and comprehensive disaster preparation.

Newswise: Here’s How to Make Flood-Prone Areas in New Jersey More Resilient to Climate Change  
Released: 15-Nov-2023 4:05 PM EST
Here’s How to Make Flood-Prone Areas in New Jersey More Resilient to Climate Change  
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

For years, Rutgers ecologist Brooke Maslo has studied how to redesign flood-prone landscapes so they can best protect the communities they border from the ravages of swollen brooks and rivers and rising seas.

Released: 7-Nov-2023 12:05 PM EST
New Model Adds Human Reactions to Flood Risk Assessment
North Carolina State University

Researchers at North Carolina State University have created a land change model that simulates interactions between urban growth, increased flooding and how humans adapt in response. The new model could offer a more realistic assessment of risk for urban planners, natural resource managers and other local government stakeholders.

Newswise: Firsthand fieldwork: Getting mangroves into coastal models for better climate prediction
Released: 24-Oct-2023 4:05 PM EDT
Firsthand fieldwork: Getting mangroves into coastal models for better climate prediction
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

To better understand important dynamics at play in flood-prone coastal areas, Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists working on simulations of Earth’s carbon and nutrient cycles paid a visit to experimentalists gathering data in a Texas wetland.

Newswise: Ushering in the era of light-powered 'multi-level memories'
Released: 17-Oct-2023 12:00 AM EDT
Ushering in the era of light-powered 'multi-level memories'
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that has developed a new zero-dimensional and two-dimensional (2D-0D) semiconductor artificial junction material and observed the effect of a next-generation memory powered by light.

Newswise: Novel framework improves resilience to extreme weather
Released: 16-Oct-2023 4:05 PM EDT
Novel framework improves resilience to extreme weather
Idaho National Laboratory (INL)

To reduce the human, economic and related risks of blackouts and other types of infrastructure failures, a team associated with the Emerging Energy Markets Analysis initiative, based at Idaho National Laboratory, used a novel framework for assessing critical infrastructure’s resilience.

Released: 16-Oct-2023 12:05 PM EDT
Rising seas will tighten vise on Miami even for people who are not flooded, says study
Columbia Climate School

Indirect pressures on many areas could outweigh direct inundation

Released: 11-Oct-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Study shows little improvement in mandated disaster plans, despite required updates
University of Kansas

Hurricanes, floods, heat waves and other disasters are striking the United States with increased severity and frequency, and since 2000 the Federal Disaster Mitigation Act has required states and local jurisdictions to have plans in place to reduce damages from such events.

Newswise: Climate change brings earlier arrival of intense hurricanes
Released: 9-Oct-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Climate change brings earlier arrival of intense hurricanes
University of Hawaii at Manoa

Intense tropical cyclones are one of the most devastating natural disasters in the world due to torrential rains, flooding, destructive winds, and coastal storm surges.

Newswise: How Floods Kill, Long After the Water Has Gone – Global Decade-Long Study
3-Oct-2023 1:10 PM EDT
How Floods Kill, Long After the Water Has Gone – Global Decade-Long Study
Monash University

Scientists in Australia have found that people impacted by a flooding event are at significantly increased risk of dying – including heart and lung problems – in a crucial window between three and six weeks after the event, even after the flooding has dissipated.

Newswise:Video Embedded fau-engineering-study-employs-deep-learning-to-explain-extreme-events
VIDEO
Released: 2-Oct-2023 8:30 AM EDT
FAU Engineering Study Employs Deep Learning to Explain Extreme Events
Florida Atlantic University

At the core of uncovering extreme events such as floods is the physics of fluids – specifically turbulent flows.

Released: 28-Sep-2023 3:05 PM EDT
First of its kind dataset shows future flooding risk at neighborhood level
Argonne National Laboratory

Partnering with AT&T and the New York Power Authority, researchers at Argonne National Laboratory used supercomputing resources to develop a new methodology for estimating increased flood risk from climate change during the mid-21st century.

Newswise: FAMU-FSU researcher will map vulnerable critical infrastructure in western Florida
Released: 20-Sep-2023 3:05 PM EDT
FAMU-FSU researcher will map vulnerable critical infrastructure in western Florida
Florida State University

A new study by Ebrahim Ahmadisharaf, a researcher at the Resilient Infrastructure and Disaster Response Center, or RIDER Center, in the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, will help communities in the Pensacola Bay and Perdido Bay watersheds manage the threat posed by compound flooding.

Newswise: Assessing the Global Impact: Floods and Infectious Diseases Over Three Decades
Released: 19-Sep-2023 10:25 AM EDT
Assessing the Global Impact: Floods and Infectious Diseases Over Three Decades
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Natural flood disasters were associated with increased new cases and deaths of enteric infections, neglected tropical diseases, and respiratory infections. Concerted efforts should be made to design better strategies for adaptation to prevent and control the outbreak of floods-related infectious disease and reduce their impact on health and life.

Released: 13-Sep-2023 2:05 PM EDT
100-year floods could occur yearly by end of 21st century
American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Most coastal communities will encounter 100-year floods annually by the end of the century, even under a moderate scenario where carbon dioxide emissions peak by 2040, a new study finds. And as early as 2050, regions worldwide could experience 100-year floods every nine to fifteen years on average.

Newswise: Poor infrastructure and rising sea levels exacerbated flooding in Libya, says expert
Released: 13-Sep-2023 11:55 AM EDT
Poor infrastructure and rising sea levels exacerbated flooding in Libya, says expert
Virginia Tech

Thousands of people are dead and at least 10,000 missing after devastating flooding in Libya. The Mediterranean storm brought heavy rains to the northeastern part of the country, already crumbling from more than a decade of conflict.   “Although Storm Daniel caused the devastating flood, a combination of factors exacerbated the nation's vulnerability to natural hazards, resulting in enormous casualties,” says Virginia Tech geophysicist Manoochehr Shirzaei.

Newswise: Disparities in who dwells behind crumbling US levees
Released: 6-Sep-2023 3:05 PM EDT
Disparities in who dwells behind crumbling US levees
American Geophysical Union (AGU)

In the United States, tens of millions of people live behind levees, but historically disadvantaged groups are more likely to live behind subpar levees and have fewer resources to maintain critical levee infrastructure, a new study reveals.

Newswise: Stevens researchers take aim at weather forecasters’ biggest blindspot
Released: 28-Aug-2023 11:35 AM EDT
Stevens researchers take aim at weather forecasters’ biggest blindspot
Stevens Institute of Technology

Anyone who’s been caught in an unexpected downpour knows that weather forecasting is an imperfect science.

Newswise: How climate change puts property values at risk in forested areas
Released: 17-Aug-2023 12:00 PM EDT
How climate change puts property values at risk in forested areas
University of Utah

Earth’s rapidly changing climate is taking an increasingly heavy toll on landscapes around the world in the form of floods, rising sea levels, extreme weather, drought and wildfire. Also at growing risk are the values of the property where these hazards are projected to worsen, according to a new study by University of Utah scholars. The research team, led by biology professor William Anderegg, attempted, for the first time, to quantify the value of U.S. property at risk in forested areas exposed to increased wildfire and tree mortality associated with climate stresses and beetle infestation.



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