Rising Sea Levels Reshape Miami’s Housing Market

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You aren't capable of using your own words. It is obvious that you are nothing more than a parrot. The video I presented is over 40 years old. It is REAL science. Not the fiction you present. I suggest you watch it in its entirety. You might actually learn something.
That's might funny coming from one-line demented feedback bomber (300 a day) Wetwall!
I suggest we compare our last 200 posts each on this board.
You don't even post on topic most of the time, just express your hostility.


The video you presented is not news, sand flows down the coast. It does not effect Global Warming or sea level rise. Eventually they will have a wall there if anything. But for now they will keep dumping sand to prevent the erosion of increasing Sea level.

Why didn't you post it after Sunset Tommy posted his two pictures of identical Miami Beach 54 years apart!
Because, as we also all know, that beach was replenished often in between those decades. That's the only reason it's there, and I posted a pic of a part of just one of those replenishments in response.

Also hilarious, you thinking real science was only 40 years ago!
It shows your pathetic CURRENT anti-science political/brain-decayed views.
Do the right thing.
Resign before you lose the last 5% of gray matter!

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Tick, Tick, Tick.

Miami-Dade begins removing polluting septic tanks in race against Sea Level Rise
January 27, 2022
Miami Herald

""Miami-Dade County’s plan to address one of the biggest sources of pollution in Biscayne Bay — and one of the grossest consequences of rising seas — kicked off with a ceremonial shovelful of dirt tossed in the air just north of Miami’s Shorecrest neighborhood Thursday morning. “This is the launch to a major overhaul,” Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told the crowd. “This is a big step toward mitigating the effect of climate change on our county.”

Thousands of homes in Miami-Dade flush their toilets and showers into underground concrete boxes that filter that wastewater down into the dirt and aquifer below. But as sea levels rise, those septic tanks don’t have room to drain. They send that dirty water into Biscayne Bay, sometimes causing fish kills, or in the worst cases, overflow into yards and homes."..."

[............]

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article257744528.html#storylink=cpy
 
Tick, Tick, Tick.

Miami-Dade begins removing polluting septic tanks in race against Sea Level Rise
January 27, 2022
Miami Herald

""Miami-Dade County’s plan to address one of the biggest sources of pollution in Biscayne Bay — and one of the grossest consequences of rising seas — kicked off with a ceremonial shovelful of dirt tossed in the air just north of Miami’s Shorecrest neighborhood Thursday morning. “This is the launch to a major overhaul,” Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told the crowd. “This is a big step toward mitigating the effect of climate change on our county.”

Thousands of homes in Miami-Dade flush their toilets and showers into underground concrete boxes that filter that wastewater down into the dirt and aquifer below. But as sea levels rise, those septic tanks don’t have room to drain. They send that dirty water into Biscayne Bay, sometimes causing fish kills, or in the worst cases, overflow into yards and homes."..."

[............]

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article257744528.html#storylink=cpy
:auiqs.jpg: :auiqs.jpg: :auiqs.jpg: :auiqs.jpg:
 
Tick, Tick, Tick.

Miami-Dade begins removing polluting septic tanks in race against Sea Level Rise
January 27, 2022
Miami Herald

""Miami-Dade County’s plan to address one of the biggest sources of pollution in Biscayne Bay — and one of the grossest consequences of rising seas — kicked off with a ceremonial shovelful of dirt tossed in the air just north of Miami’s Shorecrest neighborhood Thursday morning. “This is the launch to a major overhaul,” Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told the crowd. “This is a big step toward mitigating the effect of climate change on our county.”

Thousands of homes in Miami-Dade flush their toilets and showers into underground concrete boxes that filter that wastewater down into the dirt and aquifer below. But as sea levels rise, those septic tanks don’t have room to drain. They send that dirty water into Biscayne Bay, sometimes causing fish kills, or in the worst cases, overflow into yards and homes."..."

[............]

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article257744528.html#storylink=cpy
And has nothing to do with AGW. The sea level has been rising for the last 20,000 years, dummy. There has been no material change in the rate of change over the past 6,000 years.
 
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