scholarly journals Incorporating historical information to improve extreme sea level estimates

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leigh R. MacPherson ◽  
Arne Arns ◽  
Svenja Fischer ◽  
Fernando J. Méndez ◽  
Jürgen Jensen

Abstract. Extreme value analysis seeks to assign probabilities to events which deviate significantly from the mean and is thus widely employed in disciplines dealing with natural hazards. In terms of extreme sea levels (ESLs), these probabilities help to define coastal flood risk which guides the design of coastal protection measures. While tide gauge and other systematic records are typically used to estimate ESLs, combining systematic data with historical information has been shown to reduce uncertainties and better represent statistical outliers. This paper introduces a new method for the incorporation of historical information in extreme value analysis which outperforms other commonly used approaches. Monte-Carlo Simulations are used to evaluate a posterior distribution of historical and systematic ESLs based on the prior distribution of systematic data. This approach is applied at the German town of Travemünde, providing larger ESL estimates compared to those determined using systematic data only. We highlight a potential to underestimate ESLs at Travemünde when historical information is disregarded, due to a period of relatively low ESL activity for the duration of the systematic record.

Author(s):  
Ebru Demirci ◽  
Ian Young

Concerns about climate change highlights the needs to understand extreme sea levels and the resulting flood exposure in coastal areas on a global scale. The combined impacts of storm surge, tide, breaking wave setup and potential sea level rise will pose many economic, societal and engineering challenges in coming years. In order to predict the global coastal flood risk, a global sea level dataset of sufficiently long duration is required to undertake extreme value analysis. This presentation will outline the development and application of such a dataset.


Author(s):  
Yoshihiro UTSUNOMIYA ◽  
Hirokazu NONAKA ◽  
Masataka YAMAGUCHI ◽  
Kunimitsu INOUCHI ◽  
Yoshio HATADA ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederico Caeiro ◽  
Ayana Mateus ◽  
Luís Ramos

Author(s):  
Toshikazu Kitano

There are several arguments to be discussed for the probability of hazards due to the storm surge. One is a common point of describing the uncertainty of extreme events, and another point is for the special case due to the storm surge. 1) Return level is one of the important results by extreme value analysis, and the confidence interval also serves us an useful and desirable information for uncertainty. Is it true? The answer is negative. Return period is right, and important. But the confidence interval, in this case, is shown for return level which is the constant value that is significant after the repeating encounters of the exceedance levels over very long period. But it is of our interest to know which value is the successively occurring level in the future return period, which is a stochastic variable. It is not a constant value but unknown even for the God. The prediction interval should be employed for the next realized value of our interest.


2014 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Photiadou ◽  
MR Jones ◽  
D Keellings ◽  
CF Dewes

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