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Enter an address or city name, or zoom in to a location of interest along the coast. Explore the six links along the left margin—Sea Level Rise, Local Scenarios, Mapping Confidence, Marsh Migration, Vulnerability, and High Tide Flooding—to view visualizations under each category.
- NCEI Map Viewer Application
NCEI's Map Viewer Application presents a map interface to...
- Visualizing Flooding in Green Bay
For example, a winter storm in December 1990 produced the...
- NCEI Map Viewer Application
23 lut 2024 · A state mapping project coordinated by Maryland’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) provides a look ahead at what areas could become flooded or have potential as beneficial wetlands in the future. The project is intended to help officials prepare for sea level rise and identify areas that are in need of conservation action.
A recent report by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and the Maryland Commission on Climate Change projected that sea levels will rise in the state 1-1.6 feet by...
24 lut 2024 · DNR, in collaboration with George Mason University and The Nature Conservancy, ran an updated model to predict the future location and size of wetlands resulting from sea level rise. Using this...
A federally-supported interactive data explorer and map to understand past, present, and future sea level rise and related flood impacts for the coastlines of the United States.
Use this web mapping tool to visualize community-level impacts from coastal flooding or sea level rise (up to 10 feet above average high tides). Inundation Dashboard provides real-time and historic coastal flooding information, using both a map-based view and a more detailed station view.
Maryland, with its 3,100 miles of tidal shoreline along both the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries and the state's Atlantic Ocean shoreline and coastal bays, is highly vulnerable to sea-level rise.