The above map indicates that the probability of storm surges of six feet or more accompanying Hurricane Sandy are greater along the Navesink River, upper Shrewsbury River, Sandy Hook Bay and New York Harbor than nearly anywhere else along the storm’s path.
The map, created by the Google Crisis Response team, reflects geographic data from a variety of sources, including official information sources and user-generated content.
Posted on
October 29, 2012 at 12:05 am, filed under
Atlantic Ocean,
Breaking News,
Coastal,
Environment,
FAIR HAVEN,
Media,
MIDDLETOWN,
Nature,
RED BANK,
Rivers & streams,
RUMSON,
SANDY HOOK,
SEA BRIGHT,
Security,
SHREWSBURY,
Streets & Roads,
Utilities,
Weather,
Web/Tech and tagged
Fair Haven,
flooding,
frankenstorm,
hurricane,
irene,
little silver,
locust,
Middletown,
monmouth,
Navesink,
nj,
red bank,
Rumson,
sandy,
sea bright,
Shrewsbury,
storm,
Weather. Bookmark the
permalink. Follow any comments here with the
RSS feed for this post. Trackbacks are closed, but you can .
Email this story.