so this is the cause of sea rise in Miami today?
Tropical Storm Eta, which flooded parts of already soggy South Florida last fall and turned downtown Brickell into a car swallowing lake, dumped between 5 and 7 inches of rain in Miami over two days.
Huh? you okay. the standing water in your link is from the Tropical storm. Did it go down? you bet. Did sea level rise, nope. Not one inch. Did South Florida go on with usual business? yep. your argument is a fail. Your link is a fail. I can show you streets flooded in Des Moines, IA, the spot you think doesn't flood. Let me know if you need those pictures? oh well, here
hahahahahaahahaha you certainly love to be fooled by climate crusaders who are always wrong.
So you missed the headline and didn't read the article....yet posted back.
Miami’s sea level rise bill is $4 billion by 2060. It won’t keep every neighborhood dry.
They founded the city on land that is a few feet above sea level, and wide open to TROPICAL STORMS and HURRICANES coming in.
Here is some
GEOLOGY for your lazy eyes:
"The surface bedrock under the Miami area is called
Miami oolite or Miami limestone. This bedrock is covered by a thin layer of soil, and is no more than 50 feet (15 m) thick. Miami limestone formed as the result of the drastic changes in sea level associated with recent
glacial periods, or
ice ages.
Beginning some 130,000 years ago, the Sangamonian Stage raised sea levels to approximately 25 feet (8 m) above the current level. All of southern Florida was covered by a shallow sea. Several parallel lines of reef formed along the edge of the submerged Florida
plateau, stretching from the present Miami area to what is now the
Dry Tortugas. The area behind this reef line was in effect a large lagoon, and the Miami limestone formed throughout the area from the deposition of oolites and the shells of
bryozoans. Starting about 100,000 years ago, the
Wisconsin glaciation began lowering sea levels, exposing the floor of the lagoon. By 15,000 years ago, the sea level had dropped 300 to 350 feet (90 to 110 m) below the current level. The sea level rose quickly after that, stabilizing at the current level about 4,000 years ago, leaving the
mainland of South Florida just
above sea level."
bolding mine
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It has been underwater a lot in the past, therefore the placement for the city location was bad from the start as it is currently only 6 feet above sea level now.
You that dumb?