How Arctic Ice May Have Influenced Superstorm Sandy

seaside-heights-before-after-sandy
Oblique aerial photographs of Seaside Heights, NJ. View looking west along the New Jersey shore. Storm waves and surge destroyed the dunes and boardwalk, and deposited the sand on the island, covering roads. The red arrow points to a building that was washed off of its foundation and moved about a block away from its original location. The yellow arrow in each image points to the same feature. Captions and Photo source: USGS

Excerpts;

The sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean may not seem to be connected to a hurricane like Superstorm Sandy, but a group of scientists is suggesting the record lack of ice last summer could have set up the atmospheric pattern that sent Sandy barreling into the Northeast.

The potential link is just one of many ways that human activities can, and in some cases already seem to be affecting Earth’s weather and driving it toward extremes, be they droughts, megafloods or superstorms like Sandy…

Read Full Article, Our Amazing Planet

Coastal Change Hazards: Hurricanes and Extreme Storms, Pre- and Post-Storm Photo Comparisons – New Jersey, USGS

mantoloking-before-after-sandy
Oblique aerial photographs of Mantoloking, NJ. View looking west along the New Jersey shore. Storm waves and surge cut across the barrier island at Mantoloking, NJ, eroding a wide beach, destroying houses and roads, and depositing sand onto the island and into the back-bay. Construction crews with heavy machinery are seen clearing sand from roads and pushing sand seaward to build a wider beach and protective berm just days after the storm. The yellow arrow in each image points to the same feature. Captions and Photo source: USGS

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