Publication Citation

USGS Series Scientific Investigations Report
Report Number 2009-5230
Title Mapping and Visualization of Storm-Surge Dynamics for Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita
Edition -
Language ENGLISH
Author(s) Gesch, Dean B.
Year 2009
Originating office Earth Resources Observation and Science Center
USGS Library Call Number
Physical description iv, 19 p.
ISBN
Northernmost latitude 0320000
Southernmost latitude 0280000
Easternmost longitude -0870000
Westernmost longitude -0940000

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Abstract

The damages caused by the storm surges from Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita were significant and occurred over broad areas. Storm-surge maps are among the most useful geospatial datasets for hurricane recovery, impact assessments, and mitigation planning for future storms. Surveyed high-water marks were used to generate a maximum storm-surge surface for Hurricane Katrina extending from eastern Louisiana to Mobile Bay, Alabama. The interpolated surface was intersected with high-resolution lidar elevation data covering the study area to produce a highly detailed digital storm-surge inundation map. The storm-surge dataset and related data are available for display and query in a Web-based viewer application. A unique water-level dataset from a network of portable pressure sensors deployed in the days just prior to Hurricane Rita's landfall captured the hurricane's storm surge. The recorded sensor data provided water-level measurements with a very high temporal resolution at surveyed point locations. The resulting dataset was used to generate a time series of storm-surge surfaces that documents the surge dynamics in a new, spatially explicit way. The temporal information contained in the multiple storm-surge surfaces can be visualized in a number of ways to portray how the surge interacted with and was affected by land surface features. Spatially explicit storm-surge products can be useful for a variety of hurricane impact assessments, especially studies of wetland and land changes where knowledge of the extent and magnitude of storm-surge flooding is critical.