Storm surge
File:Surge-en.svg
An example of a storm surge.
A storm surge is a sudden rise of water hitting areas close to the coast. Storm surges are usually created by a hurricane or other tropical cyclone. The surge happens because a storm has fast winds and low atmospheric pressure. Water is pushed on shore, and the water level rises. Strong storm surges can flood coastal towns and destroy homes. A storm surge is considered the deadliest part of a hurricane. They kill many people each year.
File:KatrinaMobileCourthouseSteps.jpg
Storm surge water entering a building during Hurricane Katrina
Related pages
Other websites
- Data on Bangladesh disasters from NIRAPAD disaster response organisation.
- NOAA National Hurricane Center storm surge page
- "The 1953 English East Coast Floods"
- DeltaWorks.Org North Sea Flood of 1953, includes images, video and animations.