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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Environmental Geosciences (DEG)

Abstract


AAPG Division of Environmental Geosciences Journal
Vol. 7 (2000), No. 3., Pages 119-136

Identification of Unseen Previous HitFloodNext Hit Hazard Impacts in Southeast Florida Through Integration of Remote Sensing and Geographic Information System Techniques

Charles W. Finkl

Abstract

Coastal plains in southeast Florida are prone to flooding by storm surges and extreme rainfalls. In the example of southeast Florida, coastal Previous HitfloodNext Hit studies are based on well-defined evacuation zones that are mapped according to hurricane intensity. The areal extent of flooding, due to high-rainfall storm events, on developed wetlands and “Previous HitfloodNext Hit-proofed” coastal plains is difficult to assess using conventional techniques because the landscape is being rapidly modified by urban development. New techniques deployed in the emergency management preparedness process include spatiotemporal analysis of satellite imagery in conjunction with geographic, land, and marine information systems. Land uses within Previous HitfloodNext Hit hazard zones are classified from satellite images in an effort to quantify the impacts of storm surges for successively higher Previous HitfloodNext Hit levels associated with hurricane Categories 1, 3, and 5 evacuation scenarios. The geomatics involved shows that ~10% of the total Previous HitfloodNext Hit zone is in urban/residential land use but accounts for most of the damage to personal property and infrastructure. Potential Previous HitfloodNext Hit zones on interior coastal plains were mapped from GIS soil coverages by identifying locations of hydric soils, poor drainage conditions, surface water hydroperiods, and associated hydrogeomorphic features. These advanced procedures helped establish a new protocol for coastal Previous HitfloodTop-hazard mapping in Broward County, Florida.


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