KEY POINTS
  • Scientists in Venice, Italy, say the flooding is unlike anything they have seen in their lives, and is a cautionary tale for coastal cities around the world.
  • This week's flooding stemmed from unusually high tides, gravitational effects of the full moon and strong winds that whipped up storm surge.
  • Water levels reached 6 feet 2 inches — the highest in 53 years and just 2 inches shy of matching the record of 6 feet 4 inches that was set in November 1966.
A general view shows people walking across the flooded St. Mark's Square, by St. Mark's Basilica on November 15, 2019 in Venice, two days after the city suffered its highest tide in 50 years.

For Venetians, water is a way of life. It surrounds the city, ebbing and flowing, and at certain times of the year — usually in the fall — the tide swells, spilling water into the narrow streets and swamping the grand piazzas.

But Alberto Canestrelli, who was born and raised in Venice and spent two years working on flood forecasts for it, said the intense flooding this week in the lagoon city was unlike anything he has seen in his life.