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Inundation Exposure Assessment for Majuro Atoll, Republic of the Marshall Islands

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2016

Citation

Gesch, D.B., Danielson, J.J., and Palaseanu-Lovejoy, M., 2019, Inundation Exposure Assessment for Majuro Atoll, Republic of the Marshall Islands: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9K1GD9W.

Summary

Low-lying island environments, such as the Majuro Atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, are particularly vulnerable to inundation (coastal flooding) whether the increased water levels are from episodic events (storm surge, wave run-up, king tides) or from chronic conditions (long term sea-level rise). Land elevation is the primary geophysical variable that determines exposure to inundation in coastal settings. Accordingly, coastal elevation data are a critical input for assessments of inundation exposure and vulnerability. Previous research has demonstrated that the quality of data used for elevation-based assessments must be well understood and applied to properly model potential impacts. The vertical uncertainty of the input [...]

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Inundation_Exposure_Raster_Layers.zip 77.18 MB application/zip

Purpose

The Majuro Atoll inundation grids are useful for characterizing and quantifying inundation exposure and related vulnerability of the atoll’s low-relief lands and their population, buildings, infrastructure, and natural resources. The grids represent various scenarios of inundation and different approaches to mapping the inundation levels. The inundation scenarios include static inundation (without wave action) at 15 inches (1.25 ft, or 0.381 m), 30 inches (2.5 ft, or 0.762 m), and 45 inches (3.75 ft, or 1.143 m) above mean higher high water. The areas subject to these inundation levels are mapped separately for marine inundation (areas with a direct overland hydrologic connection to the ocean) and disconnected low-lying areas (with no direct overland flowpath connection to the ocean). These areas are mapped with three different approaches: deterministic, modified deterministic, and probabilistic, the last two being the methods that incorporate consideration of vertical uncertainty, so results can be expressed at a specific confidence level or probability. The grids from the modified deterministic approach include results (minimum and maximum projected areas) presented at the 68% and 95% confidence levels. The grids from the probabilistic approach include results presented at 68% and 95% probability of inundation at the specified increased water levels. Additionally, an example episodic inundation event, in this case projected high wave run-up, has also been mapped using deterministic and probabilistic approaches. Collectively, all the grids help demonstrate the variable mapping of projected inundation zones across the three different methods, and the enhanced information from accounting for vertical uncertainty.

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9K1GD9W

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