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2025-06-08 -Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Scientists have revealed the unenviable future of dozens of US cities
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
[Regnum] Almost three dozen US cities, home to 34 million people, are gradually sinking under water. This is the conclusion reached by scientists from Virginia Tech.

"A comprehensive radar satellite analysis of 28 major U.S. cities shows that in each city, more than 20 percent of the land is submerged," according to a paper published in the journal Nature Cities.

It is noted that this process is slow, several millimeters per year. The researchers named Texas as the fastest sinking territory in the United States. According to their data, 42% of its territory is sinking at a rate of more than 5 mm per year. Experts note that the state of the same name has the most alarming situation overall.

“High rates of subsidence were also recorded in Dallas and Fort Worth <…> Chicago, New York, Detroit, Denver and Indianapolis,” the article specifies.

The slowest rate of warming is in Boston, Portland, and Phoenix, at less than 1 mm per year. Memphis and San Jose, on the other hand, are rising slightly.

According to experts, because of this, 29 thousand buildings in American cities are in high-risk zones.

As reported by the Regnum news agency, an international group of scientists came to the conclusion that if the planet's atmosphere warms up by two degrees more than the pre-industrial era, this will lead to the flooding and destruction of more than 1,500 coastal ecosystems around the world. According to experts, in this case, the rate of sea rise will increase to 7-8 mm per year.
And if it doesn’t, then it won’t. Or possibly something else interesting will happen. The profundity is ineluctibly profound.
Vladimir Pinaev, Associate Professor of the Department of Environmental Safety and Product Quality Management at the RUDN Institute of Ecology, told Regnum that a change in the level of the world's oceans, taking into account the warming of the planet's atmosphere by two or more degrees, could occur in 2080–2100, and thanks to the research of scientists, coastal and island states can begin preparing for possible flooding scenarios in advance.
Here in Cincinnati the suburbs are uphill from the city center, so that takes care of the problem. Or they can go for the Venice solution, which if I recall correctly has worked for over a millennium…
The American newspaper New York Times reported last September that global climate change processes are significantly accelerating the wear and tear of bridges, which could lead to their mass collapses in the United States. Many of them are not designed for the abnormally high air temperatures observed in recent years. At the same time, sharp changes in temperature force the structures of these structures to constantly expand and contract, which increases their wear and tear.

Posted by badanov 2025-06-08 00:00|| E-Mail|| Front Page|| [335 views ]  Top

#1 The Venice solution yea I'm looking forward to that, a bunch of cities I can travel by boat!
Posted by Seeking Cure For Ignorance 2025-06-08 02:39||   2025-06-08 02:39|| Front Page Top

#2 The researchers named Texas as the fastest sinking territory in the United States.

#1 again!
Posted by Skidmark 2025-06-08 05:16||   2025-06-08 05:16|| Front Page Top

#3 Extract oil and water and the land sinks. Or add extra weight, like New Orleans, and you get more sinking.
Posted by Bobby 2025-06-08 07:58||   2025-06-08 07:58|| Front Page Top

#4 Wrote a collection of SCIFI short stories back in 2001-15.

One was called: 2036-GOOD TO THE LAST DROP." (c) 2005

It was about the Gulf of Mexico America, a few Mid-west states, and etc, starting to cave in. After having pumped out over 7.5 Million Barrels of oil a day for the last 50+ years, which created over 8 cubic miles of void along the US Coastline and Gulf areas.

Posted by NN2N1 2025-06-08 08:21||   2025-06-08 08:21|| Front Page Top

#5 Hey TW, being trained as a geologist at Miami University, for the rest of you readers - the one in Oxford, OH not University of Miami in Florida, I know that the burbs just north of Cincy rest on the terminal moraine.

So not only is the city lower being the Ohio River Valley, the burbs sit on the end glacial deposits from the last ice age.
Posted by Warthog 2025-06-08 09:38||   2025-06-08 09:38|| Front Page Top

#6 Had to laugh about Indianapolis being on the list. Not much threat of water intrusion unless you count White River and that’s barely a river.
Posted by Remoteman 2025-06-08 11:43||   2025-06-08 11:43|| Front Page Top

#7 Gondola production is a wide open manufacturing field. You could build to stock for a hundred years or so.
Posted by Super Hose 2025-06-08 12:25||   2025-06-08 12:25|| Front Page Top

#8 You have to wonder about DFW, what with it being at 600ft above sea level. Most of the problems they have there are due to developers building in the Trinity River bottoms.
Somebody needs to understand: There are no empty caverns that oil was pumped out of.
Oil comes out of sandstone or shale formations. That's why they have to fracture (frac) the rock, to allow it to flow. Which has been going on for a hundred years. It's not like a coal or salt mine with huge empty spaces that can collapse. Oil formations can settle, but nothing like what has happened in the Appalachians above old coal mines.
Posted by ed in texas 2025-06-08 13:09||   2025-06-08 13:09|| Front Page Top

#9 burbs just north of Cincy rest on the terminal moraine.

My garden soil is heavy clay with a high level of gravel inclusions, Warthog. I found out why when trailing daughter #1 plumped for geology at the University of Cincinnati — the schools in the area have strong geology departments because there is so much to study. On road trips, her favourite professor would pull over at highway hill cuts, just to see what was there in the layers. Sound familiar? :-)
Posted by trailing wife 2025-06-08 16:26||   2025-06-08 16:26|| Front Page Top

#10 Familiar indeed TW. Many a road trip to look at the strata. On another note, Cinci area is a world famous site for Ordovician fossils. Spent a lot of time in my youth cracking open the limestone rocks in creeks and have a nice collection of Trilobites..
Posted by Warthog 2025-06-08 16:43||   2025-06-08 16:43|| Front Page Top

#11 They say that like it’s a bad thing…
Posted by Glenmore  2025-06-08 18:14||   2025-06-08 18:14|| Front Page Top

06:45 Angel
06:45 NN2N1
06:45 MikeKozlowski
06:40 MikeKozlowski
06:21 Frank G
06:12 NN2N1
06:10 Frank G
06:05 NN2N1
06:02 NN2N1
05:52 NN2N1
05:43 Besoeker
05:34 Grom on palmtop
05:26 Frank G
04:47 Angel
02:11 Grom the Affective
02:09 Grom the Affective
02:08 Grom the Affective
01:39 Besoeker
01:31 Elmerert Hupens2660
01:24 Skidmark
01:17 Skidmark
01:06 Skidmark
01:02 Skidmark
00:59 Skidmark
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