January 11, 2022

Super King Tide: Water Levels Approach or Achieve Record Levels in the Northwest

King Tides represent unusually high water levels, which occur when the geometry of the sun and moon are just right.

But this year, the predicted tide got a major boost in Seattle, thanks to the atmosphere.

On Friday around 9:15 AM, the water level in Seattle rose to 14.47 feet above sea level and probably was higher in the 20 minutes before (there was an outage at the site between  8:42 and 912: AM)

The previous record high tide in Seattle was 14.51 ft in December 2012.  We very well might have beat it.

The result was coastal flooding throughout the area.

                                Near Alki Point that morning (courtesy of the West Seattle Blog).

Below is the predicted (blue) and actual (red) water levesl at Seattle from the NOAA Tide and Currents website since January 3.  Friday's prediction (around 12.5 ft) was WAY too low (by about 2 feet).  (a red arrow indicates Friday)

 Something greatly increased the high tide!

But what?

The secret was a vigorous low-pressure system and front that was going through EXACTLY at the right time (see sea level pressure forecast for 8 AM Friday, syncing in perfectly with the astronomically forced high tide.

Sea level pressure (solid lines)

And a trace of pressure at SeaTac Airport documents the pressure plunge (see below).  Pressure dropped all the way to 990 hPa from ~1025 hPa.... which is a big and rapid change.


Why is low pressure important?  Because low pressure causes water surfaces to rise in what is known as an inverse barometer effect (see below)

Courtesy Naval Postgraduate Schoo.

But as in a late-night commercial:  WAIT there's More!  

The passage of the trough caused winds to turn southwesterly (from the southwest) over Puget Sound, pushing water into Eliot Bay, Seattle's harbor (see below).  Even higher sea level!


You might ask how does the weather-related boost of the high tide compare to the steady increase observed over the past century.   

Good question.  Below is a plot of sea level over the past 120 years.

A very steady increase with little sign of recent acceleration upward.  The sea-level rise has been about 2.06 mm a year or 8 inches per century.   So the weather-related enhancement of about 24 inches dwarfed the steady rise of sea level over the past century, some of which may be associated with global warming.




8 comments:

  1. Did melting of recent snow / river levels contribute to this as well? Or not significant?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Beaufort Gyre much more frightening than global warming. Prove me wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I read somewhere that it was surely a sign of climate change followed by all the scary reasons why. None of the reasons were anything that Cliff just mentioned. You know, actual verifiable facts and intimate knowledge of how things work in our little corner of the world.

    Thank you, Dr. Mass!

    ReplyDelete
  4. NASA data shows 3.4 mm/yr global sea level rise over the same period. Shouldn't global and local data be similar?
    https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/sea-level/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bill..no, they can be very different...cliff

      Delete
    2. Sorry, I was looking at the wrong NASA chart.
      The chart I was looking at shows average 3.2 mm/yr sea level rise since 1993. Another NASA chart shows about 2 mm/yr sea level rise since 1900. That is a meaningful acceleration in last 25 years.

      Source: https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/sea-level/

      Delete
  5. Hi Cliff, Do you know if this celestial and atmospheric event would effect water table levels? We live in urban Snohomish county at about 450 feet above sea level. Our basement flooded last Friday, and we first noticed it around 6:00 AM. The water appeared to be coming up from the ground onto the slab and was seeping into the house in multiple areas. We have lived here for 15 years and have weathered lots of snow and rain, but we never have seen anything like it. I’d love to know your thoughts.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In general, yes. High tides elevate ground water table. However, at 450 ft above SLR I'd think it was not likely related to the high sea level.

      Delete

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