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Deglaciation-Induced Spatially Variable Sea Level Change: A Simple-Model Case Study for the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets
Author(s) -
Michael Kühn,
W. E. Featherstone,
Oleg Makarynskyy,
Wolfgang Keller
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the international journal of ocean and climate systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1759-314X
pISSN - 1759-3131
DOI - 10.1260/1759-3131.1.2.67
Subject(s) - deglaciation , sea level , sea level rise , tide gauge , sea level change , post glacial rebound , ice sheet , geology , climatology , ice albedo feedback , greenland ice sheet , future sea level , physical geography , climate change , environmental science , oceanography , arctic ice pack , sea ice , geography , holocene , antarctic sea ice
Some studies on deglaciation-induced sea level change provide only a global average change, thus neglecting the fact that sea level change is spatially variable. This is due mainly to the gravitational and visco-elastic feedback effects of the changing surface mass loads. In order to address this apparent misconception and raise further awareness, we provide a conceptual example based on a simulated total melt of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. This would give a global average sea level change of about 64 m. However, due to the changed distribution of gravitating masses, the sea-level change depends on location, with a range of about −27 m to +79 m (i.e., sea-level will even fall in some places). This spatial dependency has several implications, such as >10% biases in global average sea-level change estimates based only on tide-gauge records, flooding of almost 10% of current land areas, an increase of the length of day by almost a half a second and a northward move of the centre of mass (geocentre) by about 20 m

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