Tuesday, November 15, 2016

It is a scientific fact that ocean tides are effected by the moon.

November 15, 2016
By James Samenow

Yaneisy Duenas and Ferando Sanudo walk through the flooded parking lot to their boat at the Haulover Marine Center on Monday in North Miami

This week’s supermoon (click here) was more than a spectacular sight in the night sky. It nudged up sea levels, leading to areas of coastal flooding along the East Coast.
Such inundation offered a glimpse of the new normal in certain low-lying areas as sea levels rise because of climate change.
Coastal sections of South Florida and New England were among those immersed in ocean water on Monday and Tuesday during high tide cycles. From Palm Beach to Miami, the Weather Service hoisted coastal flood advisories cautioning that tidal levels were running about a foot above normal “due to the occurrence of the super moon.”
In New England, the Weather Service office in Boston said the combination of “very high astronomical tides” and a weak coastal storm would result in a water nearly a foot above normally dry land at high tide.....