"The floods that hit Louisiana last month were caused by rainfall that was unlike anything seen there in centuries. Most of the southern part of the state was drenched with up to two or three inches in an hour. A total of 31 inches fell just northeast of Baton Rouge in about three days; 20 parishes were declared federal disaster areas.
Climate scientists and flood managers suspect there could more like that to come — in Louisiana and in other parts of the country.
There have always been extraordinary rainstorms — storms stronger than anyone can remember. But Nicholas Pinter, a geologist at the University of California, Davis, who researches floods, says we shouldn't write these off as once-in-a-lifetime freak events."
Christopher Joyce reports for NPR's Morning Edition September 15, 2016.
"Outdated FEMA Flood Maps Don't Account For Climate Change"
Source: NPR, 09/15/2016