Frankenstorm!
From Big O (where else? ED....no actually Swappers do you even check other websites?)
$ingaporeans have never experienced a storm. Yet its roads are regularly flooded, albeit for about an hour, when rainfall is heavy. These floods, called ponding by the $ingapore government, have become regular affairs since 2010. Wikipedia has the details. We should look at New York City now to see what a “once-in-50-years” type flood really looks like.By 2 am on the morning of October 30, 2012, USA Today reported:
An estimated 5.7 million people in seven states were without power early Tuesday morning across the East and at least 14 deaths had been confirmed as mega storm Sandy swept across the region.
New York City took the brunt of Sandy’s wrath Monday night as a wide swath of the USA’s most populous city was hit by a storm surge that caused widespread flooding and power outages. Early Tuesday morning multiple fires burned in New York’s Queens borough, with local TV reported that firefighters were unable to reach some of them due to flooding and power outages.
Sandy was no longer a hurricane by the time it slammed into the south New Jersey coast at 8 p.m. ET Monday. Now designated a “post-tropical cyclone” by the National Hurricane Center, the 900-mile storm remains deadly, destructive and likely to cripple much of the East coast for several days.
By 7:45 am: An estimated 6.2 million people in seven states were without power across the East and at least 16 deaths had been confirmed. President Obama has declared New York and Long Island federal disaster areas.
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Lower Manhatten black out (via @nicksummers).
Picture posted at zerohedge.com.
Brooklyn. Picture by doorsixteen, posted at alternet.org.
This photo from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
shows water innudating a PATH station in Hoboken, New Jersey.
Posted at alternet.org.
A vehicle is submerged on 14th Street near the Consolidated Edison
power plant in New York. Picture by John Minchillo,
posted at usatoday.com.
Manhattan. Picture by Kevin Hagen, posted at online.wsj.com.
The Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel is flooding… (via @NewsBreaker),
posted at zerohedge.com.
Carey Tunnel (previously the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel).
Picture by Andrew Burton, posted at ctpost.com.
New York Avenue C and 13th Street (via iWitness Weather),
posted at zerohedge.com.
Lower Manhattan. Picture by @HobokenGirlBlog,
posted at alternet.org.
14th Street, New York. Picture posted at ctpost.com.
Lower Manhattan. Picture by Ray Wert, posted at alternet.org.
Streets are flooded under the Manhattan Bridge in the Dumbo section
of Brooklyn. Picture by Bebeto Matthews, posted at ctpost.com.
Entire front of the buildling blown off. Picture by @MegRobertson,
posted at alternet.org.
Transformer explodes in New York (14th Street).
Picture by George Weld, posted at telegraph.co.uk.
Lower east side (via David Schulz). Picture posted at zerohedge.com.
Connecticut wave, picture shared by Ernie Clark.
Atlantic City. Picture posted at ctpost.com.
North Michigan Avenue in Atlantic City. Picture by Michael Ein,
posted at latimes.com.
Dodging the rain and waves in Marshfield, Massachusetts.
Picture posted at cnn.com.
Cape May, New Jersey. Picture by Mel Evans, posted at latimes.com.
Coastal area damaged by surge. Picture posted at bbc.co.uk.
here's a song and music video about this: 'Land Under Water' by Topical Songwriter Michel Montecrossa http://vimeo.com/14927709
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