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Marion Morrison said:
Looks Like Clearwater Beach
If So, I Was There Just Last Week
Marion Morrison said:
Tides. Poor Tommy doesn't understand the concept of them. Specifically, why random images of shorelines are pointless, unless the tidal state is exactly the same.
As threads go, this one was a particularly dumb denier echo chamber. All the data contradicts them, so they have to retreat into these little cliques where they try to create their own reality.
Looks a bit greenish to me. This is clear water
No, what's funny is you don't even know that ALL of Miami's beach sand is trucked in EVERY year, and has been for DECADES!
No, what's funny is you don't even know that ALL of Miami's beach sand is trucked in EVERY year, and has been for DECADES!
Being I'm not a conspiracy cult retard, I know it has nothing to do with the issues being discussed here. You are a such conspiracy cult retard, hence you breathlessly rushed in here to announce what you thought was a brilliant insight, much like a two-year-old rushing in to proudly announce he made doodoo.
The grownups are talking. Please take it elsewhere.
You're no grownup, you're a progressive, anti science loon. The facts are well known that Miami has no natural beach sand anymore.
Thanks to all of the streams and rivers being dammed up the silt that would normally replenish the beaches is long gone. Thus any picture of the beaches is basically worthless.
However, if you dare to look at the road in the two images you can see that it is STILL there, and not threatened in any way.
You're no grownup, you're a progressive, anti science loon. The facts are well known that Miami has no natural beach sand anymore.
Thanks to all of the streams and rivers being dammed up the silt that would normally replenish the beaches is long gone. Thus any picture of the beaches is basically worthless.
Then why are you babbling about sand? You've just agreed with me, that it's not relevant to discussions using beach pictures to document sea level change. Next time, just say "Yes Mamooth, you're absolutely right again" and save everyone some time.
However, if you dare to look at the road in the two images you can see that it is STILL there, and not threatened in any way.
And now you're being stupid about how tidal state makes any such pictures worthless, and you're being stupid by assuming road elevation remained constant over 50+ years.
Because all you blather on about are meaningless, unprovable claims. I did mention the road though...or did you miss that? Did you also notice how the road seems to be fine 50 years after the fact? Or did that escape you as well, like most every other bit of factual evidence.
OoopsThis has been going on in many places in the nation for decades.
Now one of the biggest victims of AGW showing evidence of what is to come.
For all you warming deniers: you Clowns who say "it's colder than normal in Chicago today, so it can't be warming".
Would you write a 30 year mortgage on a Miami waterfront house?
Rising Sea Levels Reshape Miami’s Housing Market
Properties on the coast now trade at Discounts as flood waters and ‘king tides’ damp enthusiasm for oceanfront living
By Laura Kusisto and Arian Campo-Flores
Wall Street Journal - April 20, 2018
Rising Sea Levels Reshape Miami’s Housing Market
MIAMI—Concerns over rising sea levels and floods are beginning to reshape one of the country’s largest housing markets, with properties closer to sea level now trading at discounts to those at higher elevations.Research published Friday in the journal of Environmental Research Letters shows that single-family homes in Miami-Dade County are rising in value more slowly near sea level than at higher elevations, as buyers weigh the possibilities of more-frequent minor flooding in the short term and the challenge of reselling...[....]
balance by subscription, but you get the picture.
`
Deceptive pix. Virtually every city on Florida's East Coast that end in 'Beach' (and many that don't) used replenished sand from inland
Miami Beach , 2020.
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
1/15/2020
"...Miami Beach leaders can’t agree on what to do about climate change. But one way to keep the condos dry, at least for now, is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
That means dumping fresh sand on the beach — $16 million worth.
To push back against erosion caused by Sea Level Rise and storms, four beachfront strips on Miami Beach are receiving a federally funded face lift beginning this week.
Crews will dump 100 truckloads of sand every day. A total of 61,000 tons will be used. The sand comes via trucks from a mine in Hendry County, east of Fort Myers, courtesy of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which routinely conducts “beach renourishment” projects along Miami-Dade County’s coastline.
Deceptive pix. Virtually every city on Florida's East Coast that end in 'Beach' (and many that don't) used replenished sand from inland
Miami 'Beach' 2020
View attachment 588411
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the rising seas.www.tampabay.com
`
Erosion, do you know what that word means? I think notMiami Beach , 2020.
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
1/15/2020
"...Miami Beach leaders can’t agree on what to do about climate change. But one way to keep the condos dry, at least for now, is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
That means dumping fresh sand on the beach — $16 million worth.
To push back against erosion caused by Sea Level Rise and storms, four beachfront strips on Miami Beach are receiving a federally funded face lift beginning this week.
Crews will dump 100 truckloads of sand every day. A total of 61,000 tons will be used. The sand comes via trucks from a mine in Hendry County, east of Fort Myers, courtesy of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which routinely conducts “beach renourishment” projects along Miami-Dade County’s coastline.
Deceptive pix. Virtually every city on Florida's East Coast that end in 'Beach' (and many that don't) used replenished sand from inland
Miami 'Beach' 2020
View attachment 588411
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the rising seas.www.tampabay.com
`
Miami Beach , 2020.
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
1/15/2020
"...Miami Beach leaders can’t agree on what to do about climate change. But one way to keep the condos dry, at least for now, is to build a buffer between the condos and the Rising Seas.
That means dumping fresh sand on the beach — $16 million worth.
To push back against erosion caused by Sea Level Rise and storms, four beachfront strips on Miami Beach are receiving a federally funded face lift beginning this week.
Crews will dump 100 truckloads of sand every day. A total of 61,000 tons will be used. The sand comes via trucks from a mine in Hendry County, east of Fort Myers, courtesy of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which routinely conducts “beach renourishment” projects along Miami-Dade County’s coastline.
Deceptive pix. Virtually every city on Florida's East Coast that end in 'Beach' (and many that don't) used replenished sand from inland
Miami 'Beach' 2020
View attachment 588411
Miami Beach is dumping $16 million in fresh sand to push back against erosion
The idea is to build a buffer between the condos and the rising seas.www.tampabay.com
`
A long known problem. Here you go, the REAL cause. Real science, not your silly crap.