A new study in Geophysical Research Letters uses historical climate model simulations to demonstrate that there has been an Arctic - wide decrease in
sea level pressure since the 1800's.
Not exact matches
I'm thinking that ice floats (esp in salt water, I suppose), and
since this glacier bed is below
sea level, and if
sea water were to get into it (or even at front edge points where it meets the
sea), a rising
sea level might put even more upward
pressure on the glacier.
Since ENSO is a coupled ocean - atmosphere process, I have presented its impact on and the inter-relationships between numerous variables, including
sea surface temperature,
sea level, ocean currents, ocean heat content, depth - averaged temperature, warm water volume,
sea level pressure, cloud amount, precipitation, the strength and direction of the trade winds, etc..
Since May,
sea -
level pressure anomalies over northern Australia have been persistently high, while
pressure anomalies over the tropical eastern Pacific have been mostly lower than average.