FLOOD STAGE (Feet) ABOVE FLOOD STAGES (Date) FROM TO STAGE (Feet) - crh noaa 2025

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Inundation is the total water level that occurs on normally dry ground as a result of the storm tide, and is expressed in terms of height of water, in feet, above ground level. Inundation provides the most clearly and commonly understood method for communicating storm surge-driven coastal flooding.
There are three primary causes: rainfall runoff, river flooding, and coastal flooding. Rainfall Runoff occurs from a precipitation event, and a heavy event (defined by high rainfall rates) can overwhelm a stormwater management system, causing water to inundate roads and property.
How do you measure the current water levels? The National Weather Service relies heavily on a network of river gages operated by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). Data is received from these river gages either by phone telemetry or satellite.
Inundation is the amount of water that occurs above normally dry ground as a result of flooding. Along the coast, there are a few common sources of inundation including abnormally high tides, storm surge, persistent onshore winds and waves.
Example graph of stream stages showing Action Stage, Flood Stage, Moderate Stage, Major Stage, and Record Stage on a river.
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Flooding happens from an overflow of water from a body of water, like a lake or riverbed. This can be due to rainfall. Inundation happens when theres a large amount of water in an area and it becomes submerged.
Coastal inundation is when sea water rises high enough that it floods infrastructure and buildings or endangers peoples safety. Infrastructure is usually built in places out of docHub of sea water, so you need unusually high sea levels before you see it.
Stage is the water level above some arbitrary point in the river and is commonly measured in feet. For example, on a normal day when no rain has fallen for a while, a river might have a stage of 2 feet. If a big storm hits, the river stage could rise to 15 or 20 feet, sometimes very quickly.

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