Tracing Hurricane Helene’s Hydrological Havoc

Asheville and Black Mountain August 2024 Annotated
Satellite image of the area around Asheville and Black Mountain captured before Hurricane Helene on August 30, 2024, by the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8.
Asheville and Black Mountain October 2024 Annotated
Satellite image of flooding on the French Broad and Swanannoa rivers near Asheville and Black Mountain captured on October 2, 2024, by the MultiSpectral Instrument on Sentinel-2.

Torrential rains from Hurricane Helene swamped communities in the mountainous western part of the state.

After Hurricane Helene, western North Carolina faced severe flooding that devastated communities, disrupted essential services, and left the region in a state of emergency. Satellite images from NASA and the ESA revealed the extensive damage, while ongoing recovery efforts highlighted the storm’s lasting impact.

Hurricane Helene’s Impact on North Carolina

After striking Florida, Hurricane Helene unleashed torrential rains on communities in western North Carolina on September 27, 2024. This deluge came on the heels of two days of heavy rainfall that had already saturated the soil and elevated the region’s river levels to unusual heights. The compounded effect of these rain events, amplified by the rugged terrain, triggered deadly and destructive flash floods.

Satellite Imagery of Flood Damage

Swollen rivers submerged entire communities, swamped farmland, unmoored buildings from their foundations, and swept away power and water infrastructure. While clouds have blocked most optical imagery of the flooding collected by NASA satellites so far, sensors on the NASA-USGS Landsat 8 and 9 and the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2 satellites captured occasional glimpses of communities affected by the flooding in the days after Helene passed.

Before and After: The Visuals of Disaster

The MSI (MultiSpectral Instrument) on Sentinel-2 captured images of flooding on the French Broad and Swanannoa rivers near Asheville and Black Mountain (above lower), and near Swanannoa (below) on October 2, 2024. The other image (above upper), captured by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8, shows the same area on August 30, 2024, when rivers were at more normal levels. The pair of images below is a detailed view of the town of Swanannoa before and after flooding.

Swanannoa Before and After Flooding Annotated
Satellite images of Swanannoa captured before (August 30) and after (October 2, 2024) Hurricane Helene by the MultiSpectral Instrument on Sentinel-2.

Post-Flood Landscape: Erosion and Sediment

Saturated soils contributed to widespread runoff. This led to erosion and an accumulation of suspended sediment in floodwaters that turned waterways brown. In many areas, floodwaters appear to have receded when the satellite captured the image, but brown slicks of mud and debris remained visible.

Towns Submerged and Services Disrupted

Many of the towns in these images suffered extensive damage. Water submerged large parts of Asheville, including the Rivers Arts District and Biltmore Village, according to the Asheville Citizen-Times. A day before this image was acquired, ABC9 reported that Black Mountain lacked power, water, sewer, and passable roads. In a story about Swannanoa, The Washington Post described mangled homes, mud-choked roads, and cars in tree limbs.

Record-Breaking Rainfall and River Levels

In conditions that some meteorologists have called a 1,000-year flood, the combination of Helene and the predecessor rain event pushed three-day rain totals to extraordinary levels. One weather station in Yancey County recorded as much as 31 inches (78 centimeters) of rain between September 25-27, according to data collected by the National Weather Service’s Cooperative Observer Program. Other stations in the county saw more than 24 inches, and parts of Henderson and Allegheny County received more than 17 inches. The weather station at Asheville Regional Airport had already recorded nearly 14 inches when it stopped working on the morning of September 27.

Asheville Regional Airport Farmland Before and After Flooding
False-color satellite image of flooding in farmland near Asheville Regional Airport captured on October 1, 2024, compared to before Hurricane Helen on August 30, as captured by the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8.

Lingering Crisis: Power and Water Challenges

With the region’s mountains already saturated, large volumes of runoff poured into waterways and helped push several rivers to record heights. On September 27, the gauge on the French Broad River in Asheville measured water levels at 24.7 feet, which is more than a foot higher than the previous record. The nearby Swannonoa River at Biltmore rose to 26.1 feet, breaking the previous record by more than 6 feet. The false-color image of flooding in farmland near Asheville Regional Airport, shown above, was acquired by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8. In this image, river water appears dark blue.

A week after Helene hit, the region remained in a state of emergency. On October 4, more than 220,000 customers in North Carolina were without power, according to PowerOutage.us. That included 50 percent of customers in Buncombe County, 58 percent in Henderson County, 79 percent in Mitchell County, and 52 percent in Yancey County.

Infrastructure Damage and Response Efforts

Access to clean water was a problem in several communities. In Asheville, the storm severely damaged key water mains and transmission lines to the North Fork Water Treatment Plant, as well as the roads required to service them. There were also reports of high turbidity at Burnett Reservoir, which supplies water to the North Fork Water Treatment Plant. In an update on October 4, Asheville authorities said it was not possible to estimate a precise timeline for restoring service to the city’s entire water system but said it could potentially take weeks.

NASA’s Role in Disaster Response

NASA’s Disasters Response Coordination System has been activated to support agencies responding to the storm, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The team will be posting maps and data products on its open-access mapping portal as new information becomes available about flooding, power outages, precipitation totals, and other topics.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison and Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey and modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2024) processed by the European Space Agency.