A recent Nature Geoscience study, "High rates of sea-level rise during the last interglacial period," ($ubs. req'd) finds that sea levels could rise twice what the IPCC had project for 2100. This confirms what many scientists have recently warned (also see here), and it matches the conclusion of a study (PDF) earlier this year in Science.
[As an aside, in one debate with a denier -- can't remember who, they all kind of merge together -- I was challenged: "Name one peer-reviewed study projecting sea-level rise this century beyond the IPCC." Well, now there are two from this year alone!]
For the record, five feet (PDF) of sea level rise would submerge some 22,000 square miles of U.S. land just on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts (farewell, southern Louisiana and Florida) -- and displace more than 100 million people worldwide. And, of course, sea levels would just keep rising some six inches a decade -- or, more likely, even faster next century than this century.
The researchers base their finding on their analysis of the rate of sea-level rise during the last warm or interglacial period (the Eemian, about 120,000 years ago), when seas rose 1.6 meters (five feet) per century. Why look at the rate of Eemian sea level rise? Becaause that's the last time the planet was as warm as it soon will be again: "such rates of sea-level rise occurred when the global mean temperature was 2 °C higher than today, as expected again by AD 2100."
Indeed, if we don't reverse emissions trends very soon (and stay below 450 ppm of carbon dioxide), the planet might well warm 3°C or more by 2100. The Eemian warming was driven by "changes in orbital parameters from today (greater obliquity and eccentricity, and perihelion), known as the Milankovitch cycle." Current warming is driven by human emissions of greenhouse gases.
Here is the entire abstract from the article -- note that the Eemian is also called "Marine Isotope Stage 5":
The last interglacial period, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5e, was characterized by global mean surface temperatures that were at least 2 °C warmer than present. Mean sea level stood 4-6 m higher than modern sea level, with an important contribution from a reduction of the Greenland ice sheet. Although some fossil reef data indicate sea-level fluctuations of up to 10 m around the mean, so far it has not been possible to constrain the duration and rates of change of these shorter-term variations. Here, we use a combination of a continuous high-resolution sea-level record, based on the stable oxygen isotopes of planktonic foraminifera from the central Red Sea and age constraints from coral data to estimate rates of sea-level change during MIS-5e. We find average rates of sea-level rise of 1.6 m per century. As global mean temperatures during MIS-5e were comparable to projections for future climate change under the influence of anthropogenic greenhouse-gas emissions, these observed rates of sea-level change inform the ongoing debate about high versus low rates of sea-level rise in the coming century.
If we don't act now, we are clearly risking catastrophic sea level rise for many, many generations to come.
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wiscidea Posted 11:07 am
31 Dec 2007
The broad coastal plains inundated by the rise in sea level will become excellent habitat for marine life. Vast shallow areas will serve as buffers from storm surges, protecting new coastal wetlands for birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, et cetera. The unpredictable circumstances will drive humans inland, permitting establishment of new natural areas. Fisheries will rebound. Abandoned cities will be the foundations of new reefs.
Perhaps God is firing a shot over the bow. Rather than punish us for our sins by wiping out most of humanity with one enormous flood, He/She is giving Europe back to Arctic wildlife (no more Gulf Stream) and the coasts back to other wildlife. I wonder what He/She will do if we ignore THIS warning.
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Earth Shaman Posted 3:46 pm
31 Dec 2007
Earth Shaman
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mseall Posted 7:30 pm
31 Dec 2007
http://www.talkclimatechange.com/2007/12/18/is-sea-level- ...
TalkClimateChange - news, opinion, talk.
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Sam Wells Posted 4:02 am
01 Jan 2008
Where: the Earth is not perfectly round and water will flow at different rates from the poles towards the Equator in a "lumpy" manner perhaps, is my understanding. So maybe that is why some islands in the Indian Ocean and South Asia seem to have a more pronounced sea level rise that other places? I haven't a clue.
When: this depends on the release of a whole bunch of land-based ice being melted into water. Think glaciers. Sea ice already displaces water in the ocean (ice actually expands compared to a liquid state, right?). But our predictions of land ice melt possibly require more investigation. That could be catastrophic, a "Noah event."
Why: well let's say heat trapping gases in the lower atmosphere are strongly correlated, although as Earth Shaman points out, Circadian cycles may be present as well - with unknown effects IMHO.
But as a sort of modern-day "beach man," the impacts on coastal communities could be felt even with a rise of a foot or so. Now that is serious, because with erosion and land subsidence, and the fact that many communities on the Gulf and Atlantic coasts were built with a 300-foot beach, the beach would simply disappear! No more beaches. Some of the best Pacific surf breaks will be lost as well. Wow, surfing of all kinds is really going to suffer.
Yep, 12 inches would be a total disaster for many of us living on what is a sand spit. /sam
Onward through the fog
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Pangolin Posted 8:22 am
01 Jan 2008
Exactly how much methane is coming out of the siberian permafrost is also a product of pure speculation. We know that there is more biologically available carbon in those permafrosts than every chunk of coal and drop of oil ever burnt but we don't know how to estimate the eventual release or what the feedback mechanisms will be.
All we are really sure of is that events are off the bad side of the charts.
All us backyard Noahs better get to building. How long is a cubit anyway? It's the Waterworld baby. TEOTWAWKI (sing along now..)
Put the Carbon Back
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Delay And Deny Posted 3:38 pm
01 Jan 2008
I'm so glad your conclusion matched their conclusion. Which was also the result of a summary of a brief. That summary is now being used to distill a policy into an action statement. The outcome of which will be that of their conclusion.
We're still waiting on the data.
But that will come.
Or else we'll make some up.
My Log
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