Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (Sep 2018)

Extreme water levels, waves and coastal impacts during a severe tropical cyclone in northeastern Australia: a case study for cross-sector data sharing

  • T. R. Mortlock,
  • T. R. Mortlock,
  • D. Metters,
  • J. Soderholm,
  • J. Maher,
  • S. B. Lee,
  • G. Boughton,
  • N. Stewart,
  • E. Zavadil,
  • I. D. Goodwin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-18-2603-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 2603 – 2623

Abstract

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Severe tropical cyclone (TC) Debbie made landfall on the northern Queensland coast of Australia on 27 March 2017 after crossing the Great Barrier Reef as a slow-moving Category 4 system. Groups from industry, government and academia collected coastal hazard and impact data before, during and after the event and shared these data to produce a holistic picture of TC Debbie at the coast. Results showed the still water level exceeded the highest astronomical tide by almost a metre. Waves added a further 16 % to water levels along the open coast, and were probably unprecedented for this area since monitoring began. In most places, coastal barriers were not breached and as a result there was net offshore sand transport. If landfall had occurred 2 h earlier with the high tide, widespread inundation and overwash would have ensued. This paper provides a case study of effective cross-sector data sharing in a natural hazard context. It advocates for a shared information platform for coastal extremes in Australia to help improve the understanding and prediction of TC-related coastal hazards in the future.