Interactions, mechanisms and impact of future coastal urban flooding. A case study of Cork city
Kirkpatrick, Jennifer Isabel Munro ; Nash, Stephen ; Hartnett, Michael ; Comer, Joanne ; Olbert, Agnieszka Indiana
Kirkpatrick, Jennifer Isabel Munro
Nash, Stephen
Hartnett, Michael
Comer, Joanne
Olbert, Agnieszka Indiana
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Publication Date
2020-11-17
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Conference Paper
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Kirkpatrick, Jennifer Isabel Munro, Nash, Stephen, Hartnett, Michael, Comer, Joanne, & Olbert, Agnieszka Indiana. (2020). Interactions, mechanisms and impact of future coastal urban flooding. A case study of Cork city. Paper presented at the Irish National Hydrology Conference 2020: 21st National Hydrology Conference online, 17-18 November.
Abstract
In coastal floodplains, high river flows and high coastal water levels can result in extensive flooding. Mechanisms of flooding play a crucial role in flood characteristics with distinctive differences in flood wave propagation pattern and geographical extent of inundation. Climate change is expected to alter these flood mechanisms. This paper presents an assessment of urban inundation due to a combined effect of multiple source flooding. Cork City, a coastal city in the south of Ireland, frequently subject to complex coastal-fluvial flooding is used as a case study to investigate changes in flood mechanisms, dynamics and extents due to climate change. Interactions and dependencies between tides, surges and river discharges were computed to understand the likelihood of cooccurrence of compound drivers. The MSN Flood was used to predict potential future inundation patterns for a range of climate scenarios under various hydrological conditions. Scenarios were based on estimates of current, medium-range and high-end projections of extreme river flows and sea levels.
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Hydrology Ireland
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland