King tides: No scientific definition at all. Just a popular term among the people or on the news. It refers to the highest tide that occurs at a specific location per year. This term was what I commonly used. The height of the king tides will be similar along the year during normal weather conditions. But the low air pressure (pressing down to the water level) and strong winds can elevate the sea level above expect height. King tides generally occur in Summer, yet in Winter occasionally.
Highest astronomical tide (HAT): The highest level of water that can be predicted to occur under average meteorological conditions and any combination of astronomical conditions. This level may NOT be reached every year. However, a storm tide level reaching higher than the highest astronomical tide is more likely to cause inundation and flooding in coastal areas.
Mean sea level (MSL): The value obtained at a site by averaging hourly tide heights observed over a long period of time (preferably 18.6 years). It is also the average water level that would exist in the absence of tides.
Residual: The difference between the predicted tide—under average weather conditions—and the actual tide height. Actual tides include the height of the tide itself, and the height variations (residuals) that result from the effects of the weather on the height of the sea level. The residuals give a measure of height of storm surges during severe (cyclonic) weather conditions.
The components of the residuals are:
- storm surge
- wave setup
- wave run-up.
Seiche: A standing oscillation in an enclosed or semi-enclosed body of water that continues after the end of the original force. They can be triggered in an otherwise still body of water by strong winds, changes in atmospheric pressure, earthquakes, tsunami or tides. The waves in a seiche are stationary in the horizontal plane and do not progress forward. The waves move up and down, but not forward like wind waves at sea. I have no previous knowledge of this until I see this video.
Storm surge: An increase in water level associated with some significant meteorological event such as:
- persistent strong winds
- falling barometric pressure
- tropical cyclone
A storm surge is an abnormal rise of water level generated by a storm over and above the predicted tide level. Storm surges are the combined effect of wind setup and wave setup, and falling barometric pressure. In some situations, when winds blow offshore, sea level can fall lower than the predicted tide level too. The magnitude of the storm surge depends on the severity and duration of the event and the seabed topography at the site. Most large surges are caused by tropical cyclones.
Storm tide: The combination of a storm surge and the normal astronomical tide. If the storm surge arrives at the same time as the high tide, the potential risk of inundaton, flooding and erosion is greater than at a lower tide. An additional threat at this time could come from the presence of very high waves (wave run-up). The inundation produced by a storm tide is often exacerbated by wave runup, waves overtopping natural or constructed levees and localised intense rainfall. This can lead to coincident flooding if combined with the effects of riverine (freshwater) flooding.
Tropical cyclone: A non-frontal low pressure system (below 1000hPa) rotating clockwise (in the southern hemisphere) that is of tropical origin and in which 10-minute mean wind speeds exceed gale force (63km/hr, 34kt or 17.5m/s).
Tsunami: A wave generated by seismic activity. It is also called a seismic sea wave, or incorrectly a tidal wave. Barely visible in the open ocean, the amplitude of a tsunami may increase greatly as it approaches shallow coastal waters. Tsunami waves travel in groups (wave trains) and often the largest wave occurs long after the arrival of the first wave. This is particularly evident within harbours and bays where seiching can increase the height of the tsunami wave.
Wave run-up: This is the rush of water up a beach after a wave reaches the shoreline. The amount of wave run-up is the vertical distance between the maximum height the rush of water reaches on the beach and the still water level. Wave run-up depends on many factors including wave height, wave period, and the slope and composition of the beach.
Wave setup: Refers to an increase in the mean water level towards the shoreline, caused by wave action. This can be important during storm events as it results in an increase in water level above the tide.
Wind setup: The vertical rise of a body of water above still water level, caused by wind stresses on the surface of the water. Wind setup at the coast can force the sea level higher or lower than the predicted tide depending on the direction of the wind relative to the coast. When the wind is blowing towards the coast (onshore), water will be piled up against the coast and raise the sea level. When the wind is blowing offshore, water is pushed away from the coast and sea levels fall.
Here's a simpler presentation about storm surge:
Q: What is storm surge?
A: Storm surge is the rise in seawater level caused solely by a storm.
Storm surge is the abnormal rise in seawater level during a storm, measured as the height of the water above the normal predicted astronomical tide. The surge is caused primarily by a storm’s winds pushing water onshore. The amplitude of the storm surge at any given location depends on the orientation of the coast line with the storm track; the intensity, size, and speed of the storm; and the local bathymetry.
Storm tide is the total observed seawater level during a storm, resulting from the combination of storm surge and the astronomical tide. Astronomical tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the sun and the moon and have their greatest effects on seawater level during new and full moons—when the sun, the moon, and the Earth are in alignment. As a result, the highest storm tides are often observed during storms that coincide with a new or full moon.


