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Review article: a comprehensive review of compound flooding literature with a focus on coastal and estuarine regions

Review article: a comprehensive review of compound flooding literature with a focus on coastal and estuarine regions
Review article: a comprehensive review of compound flooding literature with a focus on coastal and estuarine regions
Compound flooding, where the combination or successive occurrence of two or more flood drivers leads to a greater impact, can exacerbate the adverse consequences of flooding, particularly in coastal--estuarine regions. This paper reviews the practices and trends in coastal-estuarine compound flood research and synthesizes regional to global findings. A systematic review is employed to construct a literature database of 279 studies relevant to compound flooding in a coastal-estuarine context. This review explores the types of compound flood events and their mechanistic processes, and it synthesizes terminology throughout the literature. Considered in the review are six flood drivers (fluvial, pluvial, coastal, groundwater, damming/dam failure, and tsunami) and five precursor events and environmental conditions (soil moisture, snow, temp/heat, fire, and drought). Furthermore, this review summarizes research methodology and study application trends, as well as considers the influences of climate change and urban environments. Finally,
this review highlights knowledge gaps in compound flood research and discusses the implications on future practices. Our five recommendations for compound flood research are (1) adopt consistent terminology and approaches, (2) expand the geographic coverage of research, (3) pursue more inter-comparison projects, (4) develop modelling frameworks that better couple dynamic Earth systems, and (5) design urban and coastal infrastructure with compounding in mind.
1684-9981
747-816
Green, Joshua
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Haigh, Ivan D.
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Quinn, Niall
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Neal, Jeff
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Wahl, Thomas
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Wood, Melissa
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Eilander, Dirk
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de Ruiter, Marleen
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Ward, Phillip
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Camus, Paula
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Green, Joshua
b20fb9a5-1fd9-4646-96b0-64620bed7aa3
Haigh, Ivan D.
945ff20a-589c-47b7-b06f-61804367eb2d
Quinn, Niall
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Neal, Jeff
d8d057a0-6fd2-4808-826e-d78589f7ffa7
Wahl, Thomas
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Wood, Melissa
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Eilander, Dirk
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de Ruiter, Marleen
60e34fdd-a0df-4a72-a6e7-eff15647716c
Ward, Phillip
25d05baa-d24a-4e45-b9fb-5669c1dbe375
Camus, Paula
628578b5-e977-49f8-a053-16eaebdd79d6

Green, Joshua, Haigh, Ivan D., Quinn, Niall, Neal, Jeff, Wahl, Thomas, Wood, Melissa, Eilander, Dirk, de Ruiter, Marleen, Ward, Phillip and Camus, Paula (2025) Review article: a comprehensive review of compound flooding literature with a focus on coastal and estuarine regions. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 25 (2), 747-816. (doi:10.5194/nhess-25-747-2025).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Compound flooding, where the combination or successive occurrence of two or more flood drivers leads to a greater impact, can exacerbate the adverse consequences of flooding, particularly in coastal--estuarine regions. This paper reviews the practices and trends in coastal-estuarine compound flood research and synthesizes regional to global findings. A systematic review is employed to construct a literature database of 279 studies relevant to compound flooding in a coastal-estuarine context. This review explores the types of compound flood events and their mechanistic processes, and it synthesizes terminology throughout the literature. Considered in the review are six flood drivers (fluvial, pluvial, coastal, groundwater, damming/dam failure, and tsunami) and five precursor events and environmental conditions (soil moisture, snow, temp/heat, fire, and drought). Furthermore, this review summarizes research methodology and study application trends, as well as considers the influences of climate change and urban environments. Finally,
this review highlights knowledge gaps in compound flood research and discusses the implications on future practices. Our five recommendations for compound flood research are (1) adopt consistent terminology and approaches, (2) expand the geographic coverage of research, (3) pursue more inter-comparison projects, (4) develop modelling frameworks that better couple dynamic Earth systems, and (5) design urban and coastal infrastructure with compounding in mind.

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nhess-25-747-2025 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 November 2024
Published date: 20 February 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499312
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499312
ISSN: 1684-9981
PURE UUID: 960b0582-0f72-45ca-bd79-935047568c91
ORCID for Joshua Green: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2230-4633
ORCID for Ivan D. Haigh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9722-3061
ORCID for Melissa Wood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8300-8013

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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2025 17:58
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Joshua Green ORCID iD
Author: Ivan D. Haigh ORCID iD
Author: Niall Quinn
Author: Jeff Neal
Author: Thomas Wahl
Author: Melissa Wood ORCID iD
Author: Dirk Eilander
Author: Marleen de Ruiter
Author: Phillip Ward
Author: Paula Camus

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