The Marine Lab in the Path of Fury | Hakai Magazine

The DeFelice Marine Center in Louisiana Credit: Shannon Dosemagen, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Coastal marine labs around the world are located on and studying the front lines of climate change. Some, such as the DeFelice Marine Center in Louisiana, are in the foremost line of fire. This article mentions a similar situation facing the science institutions in Woods Hole, which are addressing it through the Resilient Woods Hole initiative.

As the storm first gathered strength in the Gulf of Mexico, its future path was indecipherable. Its capacity for damage, though, was clear. The water was warm and the air was thick and humid—the recipe for a potentially historic tempest. On Thursday, August 26, 2021, just hours after the system was classified as a tropical depression, Louisiana’s governor declared a state of emergency: every resident along the state’s coastline needed to prepare for a major hurricane.

Louisiana is protected by a series of levees that zig and zag along the coastline—walls of earth meant to block hurricane-driven waves from reaching the state’s bigger towns and villages. Floodgates clasp shut so that local bayous don’t overflow with storm surge. By necessity, though, the DeFelice Marine Center stands outside this system of defenses. Read rest of the article here.

Source: The Marine Lab in the Path of Fury | Hakai Magazine