1 / 26

An Overview of the Observations of Sea Level Change

An Overview of the Observations of Sea Level Change. NSCE 11 th Conference on Science, Policy, and the Environment: Our Changing Oceans. R. Steven Nerem University of Colorado Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research

noe
Download Presentation

An Overview of the Observations of Sea Level Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Overview of the Observations of Sea Level Change NSCE 11th Conference on Science, Policy, and the Environment: Our Changing Oceans R. Steven Nerem University of Colorado Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

  2. The Earth is Warming

  3. Why does sea level change?The Bathtub Model Ice Melt + Precipitation over Oceans Runoff from Continents Thermal Expansion - Evaporation from Oceans Precipitation over Continents

  4. What is Global Mean Sea Level Change? • “Global Mean Sea Level Change” is the change in the average height of the oceans over the entire globe at a single point in time. • Sea level change at a specific location in the ocean may be higher or lower than the global mean because of differences in ocean temperature and other effects. • Does not include ocean tides, storm surge • Does not include effects of land subsidence, which locally can exacerbate the effects of sea level rise.

  5. How do we measure sea level change? GRAVITY Argo

  6. What do the tide gauges tell us? 3.2 mm/year Average Rate ~ 1.8 mm/year [Church and White, 2006]

  7. What do the altimetersatellites tell us? Jason 1 & 2 TOPEX/ Poseidon Trend = 3.3 ± 0.4 mm/year

  8. What do satellite gravity measurements tell us?

  9. Greenland Ice Mass Changes from GRACE April, 2002 – June, 2010 Rate of Ice mass change: All Greenland: -239 Gt/yr South Greenland: -162 Gt/yr North Greenland: -77 Gt/yr Total Greenland ice volume (1 Gton = 1 km3 of water) -239 Gton/yr = 0.66 mm/yr sea level rise [Wahr, 2010]

  10. Greenland Ice Mass Changes from GRACE

  11. Antarctica Ice Mass Variations from GRACE Total Antarctic ice mass April, 2002 – June, 2010 All Antarctica: -143 Gton/yr West Antarctica: -155 Gton/yr East Antarctica: +15 Gton/yr -143 Gton/yr = 0.40 mm/yr sea level rise [Wahr, 2010]

  12. Is Antarctic Ice Mass Loss Holding Steady? [Wahr, 2010]

  13. IceSat Surface Elevation Changes [Pritchard et al., 2009]

  14. Alaskan Glaciers from GRACE Rate of mass change between April, 2002 and May, 2010 Rate of mass change: -55 Gton/yr = 0.15 mm/yr sea level rise . [Wahr, 2010]

  15. The Argo Array

  16. Current Sea Level Budget Thermal Expansion: ~ 1 mm/year + Mountain Glaciers: ~ 1.1 mm/year + Greenland Ice Melt: ~ 0.6 mm/year + Antarctic Ice Melt: ~ 0.4 mm/year Land Water Storage: ? = Total: ~ 3.1 mm/year

  17. Spatial Variations in Sea Level Rise 1993-2010

  18. Western Pacific Sea Level Change Merrifield (2010)

  19. Predicted Regional Patternsof Sea Level Change from Ice Melt [Bamber, 2009]

  20. What Will Happen in the Future? Empirical projections Rahmstorf, 2007 Coupled climate models IPCC, 2007

  21. 1 Meter of Sea Level Rise – Gulf Coast

  22. 1 Meter of Sea Level Rise - Florida

  23. 6 Meters of Sea Level Rise - Florida

  24. It can happen – because it has happened before The last time the Arctic was 3 to 5°C warmer than present, global sea level was ~6 meters higher than present [Clark, 2009]

  25. Summary • Observations of sea level change are consistent with how we expect sea level to respond in a warming climate. • Sea level rose twice as fast in the last decade than over the last half of the 20th century. • Presently, ocean warming, melting of mountain glaciers, and melting of the polar ice caps are contributing in roughly equal amounts to the observed rise. • The large uncertainty in future sea level rise projections is due mainly to the uncertain contributions of Greenland and Antarctica, which appear to be accelerating. • Whether the current rate of rise is accelerating can only be resolved with longer satellite time series. • Many of the remaining questions about sea level rise can only be answered with continued satellite measurements, which have an uncertain future.

  26. Thanks!

More Related