Project

Assessing Coastal Flood Risk with Maine Communities

Expanding Maine’s network of tide gauges and working closely with communities to identify flood thresholds.

The Gulf of Maine Research Institute is partnering with the coastal Maine communities of Machias, Saint George, Boothbay Harbor, and Portland to collect local water level and flood impact data. We are piloting processes that support translation of data for local decision-making and intergenerational community engagement.

Project Goals:

  • Install Hohonu tide gauges in four coastal Maine communities (Machias, Saint George, Boothbay Harbor, and Portland), and collect local flood impact observations through community science programs led by local community organizations and educators.
  • Develop a framework for municipal-scale siting of gauges for high water monitoring applications.
  • Support local-to-regional decision-making and emergency management by integrating data into National Weather Service forecasting.
  • Develop data products in support of ongoing coastal resilience projects.
  • Pilot a sea level rise and coastal flooding curriculum that engages youth in local data collection and conversations with decision-makers in their communities.
  • Develop interactive platforms for robust and sustainable access to water level and community science data.
Watch how we approached assessing coastal flood risk with Maine communities.

A researcher in a blue shirt is drilling a tide gauge into a wooden plank secured to a bridge.
Dr. Hannah Baranes begins the installation of a tide gauge on a bridge over the Fore River in Portland, Maine.
A tide gauge is being installed by a researcher.
The Gulf of Maine Research Institute made progress in Stage 1 with a team of civic, community, and industry partners in building technological, scientific, and community infrastructure for establishing flood thresholds and improving tide predictions in coastal Maine communities.

Coastal Flooding Community Science: December 23, 2022

Check out this story map that displays preliminary water level and flood impact observations collected by this project during a southeaster that drove widespread flooding on December 23, 2022

This is a storymap summarizing key data and observations collected during a storm on December 23, 2021.

Project Team

Project Sponsor:

This project is generously supported by the National Science Foundation, including the Directorate of Geosciences and the EPSCoR program.

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