MS THESIS DEFENSE: CARLA BAIZEAU – “MORE REALISTIC ASSESSMENT OF FUTURE EXPOSURE TO HIGH-TIDE FLOODING IN AMERICAN SAMOA”

Abstract: American Samoa is experiencing the fastest rates of relative sea-level rise due post-seismic subsidence resulting from the 2009 earthquake. Indeed, American Samoa is already undergoing severe flooding impacts and requires a planning tool to strategically adapt to future flooding conditions. Here, we propose a more realistic assessment of future exposure to high-tide flooding (HTF) compared to the already available sea-level rise viewers by including site-specific land subsidence projections (Han et al., 2019), several high-tide flooding frequencies, and an updated Digital Elevation Model (DEM). While land subsidence projections reduce the timing uncertainties of sea-level rise exposure, the DEM and HTF frequencies enhance the overall spatial extent of the exposed area. Choosing a less frequent HTF frequency, e.g., 50-days per year, provides a better representation of the useable area throughout the century. On the other hand, the majority of the more realistic subsidence impacts is felt within the next 50 years because of the trend of the projections. The American Samoa relative sea-level rise viewer publicly available on the PacIOOS website provides a risk/tolerance assessment of HTF exposure with a selection of sea-level rise scenarios, and HTF frequencies throughout the century. 

Location: SAKAM C101

Date & Time: Monday, April 14, 2025 at 10:00am

You can also connect via Zoom:

https://hawaii.zoom.us/j/83585376952

Meeting ID: 835 8537 6952
Passcode: 138057

Date

Apr 14 2025
Expired!

Time

10:00 am - 12:00 am
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