Authors
Chris Milliner, Kathryn Materna, Roland Bürgmann, Yuning Fu, Angelyn W Moore, David Bekaert, Surendra Adhikari, Donald F Argus
Publication date
2018/9/19
Journal
Science advances
Volume
4
Issue
9
Pages
eaau2477
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
On 26 August 2017, Hurricane Harvey struck the Gulf Coast as a category four cyclone depositing ~95 km3 of water, making it the wettest cyclone in U.S. history. Water left in Harvey’s wake should cause elastic loading and subsidence of Earth’s crust, and uplift as it drains into the ocean and evaporates. To track daily changes of transient water storage, we use Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements, finding a clear migration of subsidence (up to 21 mm) and horizontal motion (up to 4 mm) across the Gulf Coast, followed by gradual uplift over a 5-week period. Inversion of these data shows that a third of Harvey’s total stormwater was captured on land (25.7 ± 3.0 km3), indicating that the rest drained rapidly into the ocean at a rate of 8.2 km3/day, with the remaining stored water gradually lost over the following 5 weeks at ~1 km3/day, primarily by evapotranspiration. These results indicate that GPS networks …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Milliner, K Materna, R Bürgmann, Y Fu, AW Moore… - Science advances, 2018