Lots of coulds..and mights there....nothing real though. How much damage has sea level increase caused in florida since the 1600's? According to the climate science establishment...how much has sea level increased in florida since the 1600's. Here is a recent photo of the Castillo de San Marcos in Saint Augustine Fl..
Here is one taken in 1875...sea level looks pretty much unchanged since then.
Sure sea level is rising...it has been for thousands of years...the present sea level rise is nothing new and quite a bit slower than it has been as recently as the middle of the 20th century. Alarmism is bunk.
You are bunk
Sea Rise Slowly Swallowing St. Augustine, America's Oldest .
May 12, 2015 -
Sea level rise is threatening to swallow
St.
Augustine, Florida. ...
Rising sea levels are endangering America's oldest city located in the state of Florida. .... others through the state's routine
beach-nourishment and water-monitoring programs. ... supply, are
threatenedby infusions of saltwater from rising seas.
Reuters - Water s edge the crisis of rising sea levels
Part 1: A Reuters analysis finds that flooding is increasing along much of the nation’s coastline, forcing many communities into costly, controversial struggles with a relentless foe.
Reuters gathered more than 25 million hourly readings from
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tide gauges at nearly 70 sites on the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific coasts and compared them to flood thresholds documented by the National Weather Service.
The analysis was then narrowed to include only the 25 gauges with data spanning at least five decades.
It showed that during that period, the average number of days a year that tidal waters reached or exceeded flood thresholds increased at all but two sites and tripled at more than half of the locations.
ABOUT THE ANALYSIS
Since 2001, water has reached flood levels an average of 20 days or more a year in Annapolis, Maryland; Wilmington, North Carolina; Washington, D.C.; Atlantic City, New Jersey; Sandy Hook, New Jersey; and Charleston, South Carolina. Before 1971, none of these locations averaged more than five days a year. Annapolis had the highest average number of days a year above flood threshold since 2001, at 34. On the Delmarva Peninsula, the annual average tripled to 18 days at the Lewes, Delaware, tide gauge.