Co-author Professor Eelco Rohling, from the Australian National University and formerly of the University of Southampton, adds: «By developing a novel method that realistically approximates future sea level rise, we have been able to add new insight to the debate and show that there is substantial evidence for a significant
recent acceleration in the sea level rise on a global and regional level.
Not exact matches
The same analysis applied to the period 19932010, however, indicates a
sea -
level rise of about three millimetres per year, consistent with other work and suggesting that the
recent acceleration in sea -
level rise has been greater than previously thought.
After over a year of sideways and downward movement from late 2015 through early 2017, the most
recent NASA report shows that over the past year an
acceleration in sea level rise has become visible on the NASA graph, even with just a quick glance (then again, while the long term trend is consistently upward, the annual trend is so variable, that it's likely foolish on my part to suggest a change
in trend based on the most
recent periods of increase which have only been occurring for less than 12 months).
«Trends and
acceleration in global and regional
sea levels since 1807» «A 20th century acceleration in global sea - level rise» «Sea - level rise from the late 19th to the early 21st century» «An anomalous recent acceleration of global sea level rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
sea levels since 1807» «A 20th century
acceleration in global
sea - level rise» «Sea - level rise from the late 19th to the early 21st century» «An anomalous recent acceleration of global sea level rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
sea -
level rise» «
Sea - level rise from the late 19th to the early 21st century» «An anomalous recent acceleration of global sea level rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
Sea -
level rise from the late 19th to the early 21st century» «An anomalous
recent acceleration of global
sea level rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
sea level rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century
sea - level rise&raq
sea -
level rise»
Figure 3: «Considerations for estimating the 20th century trend
in global mean
sea level» Figure 1B: «Reassessment of 20th century global mean
sea level rise» «
Recent global
sea level acceleration started over 200 years ago?»
The average rate of
sea -
level rise in the 20th century was 15 cm / century, but
in the quarter - century since 1990 it has been 30 cm / century and is showing signs of further
acceleration in more
recent measurements.
The loud divergence between
sea -
level reality and climate change theory — the climate models predict an accelerated
sea -
level rise driven by the anthropogenic CO2 emission — has been also evidenced
in other works such as Boretti (2012a, b), Boretti and Watson (2012), Douglas (1992), Douglas and Peltier (2002), Fasullo et al. (2016), Jevrejeva et al. (2006), Holgate (2007), Houston and Dean (2011), Mörner 2010a, b, 2016), Mörner and Parker (2013), Scafetta (2014), Wenzel and Schröter (2010) and Wunsch et al. (2007) reporting on the
recent lack of any detectable
acceleration in the rate of
sea -
level rise.
«Trends and
acceleration in global and regional sea levels since 1807» «A 20th century acceleration in global sea - level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level
acceleration in global and regional
sea levels since 1807» «A 20th century acceleration in global sea - level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
sea levels since 1807» «A 20th century
acceleration in global sea - level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level
acceleration in global
sea - level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
sea -
level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&r
level rise» «Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&ra
rise» «
Sea - Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
Sea -
Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&r
Level Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&ra
Rise from the Late 19th to the Early 21st Century» «An Anomalous
Recent Acceleration of Global Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level
Acceleration of Global
Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&raq
Sea Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&r
Level Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century sea - level rise&ra
Rise» «Probabilistic reanalysis of twentieth - century
sea - level rise&raq
sea -
level rise&r
level rise&ra
rise»
«Second,
in contrast to the previously reported slowing
in the rate during the past two decades1, our corrected GMSL data set indicates an
acceleration in sea -
level rise (independent of the VLM used), which is of opposite sign to previous estimates and comparable to the accelerated loss of ice from Greenland and to
recent projections, and larger than the twentieth - century
acceleration.
@ 1 Paul S. Most assessments of ice sheet contribution to
sea level rise indicate an
acceleration over the past decade, whereas altimeter - measured SLR has not been faster over the most
recent decade There was a paper published within the last couple of years by some of this sites contributors that suggested part of the disparity may be due to an increase
in land based water.
None of these could have been caused by an increase
in atmospheric CO2, Model projections of warming during
recent decades have greatly exceeded what has been observed, The modelling community has openly acknowledged that the ability of existing models to simulate past climates is due to numerous arbitrary tuning adjustments, Observations show no statistically valid trends
in flooding or drought, and no meaningful
acceleration whatsoever of pre-existing long term
sea level rise (about 6 inches per century) worldwide, Current carbon dioxide
levels, around 400 parts per million are still very small compared to the averages over geological history, when thousands of parts per million prevailed, and when life flourished on land and
in the oceans.