NASA Photo Illuminates Florida's Risk For Sea Level Rise,
Deadly Tropical Cyclones
By Eric Zerkel
Published: November 19, 2014
Published: November 19, 2014
The photo, taken by astronauts
aboard the International Space Station (ISS) in October 2014, shows Florida's
peninsula illuminated at night. As NASA notes, the brightest areas in the photo
indicate the most populous areas in the state. Notably, the Miami-Fort
Lauderdale metro area, home to 5.6 million people, is the most noticeable blip
on the landscape, lighting up the entire southeastern coast of Florida a
brilliant white.
Other noticeable cities include
the Tampa metro area (2.8 million people), the brightest area on the Gulf
Coast, the Orlando metro area (2.3 million people), which lights up a chunk of
central Florida and the Jacksonville metro area (1.3 million people) in the far
northeastern corner of the state.
The most notorious example might
just come from Hurricane Andrew, which made landfall as a Category 5 hurricane
in the Miami metro area in 1992. When Andrew came ashore in the Homestead,
Florida, area it shredded homes and caused an estimated $23 billion in damage,
killing 23 people.
Global sea level rise is another
risk to the millions along Florida's coast. Since 1880, sea levels along the
Florida coast have risen by nearly a foot, and are projected to rise another 3
to 6 feet by the end of the century due to climate change. So great is the
concern for sea level rise in the coastal areas of South Florida, where some
areas are currently just five feet above sea level, that local politicians in
South Miami, Florida, recently
proposed splitting Florida into two separate states,
North and South Florida, in order to better sort out sea level rise
implications.
With Florida's population centers
so clustered along the coast, it seems more like a matter of when, not if,
serious and possibly deadly events could impact millions of Floridians.
Don't forget to click through the
entire slideshow above to see how other global cities light up the surface of
Earth at night.
http://www.wunderground.com/news/nasa-photo-florida-coast-night-20141119
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