Seas Could Rise Twice as High as Predicted - Study
US: December 17, 2007
WASHINGTON - The world's sea levels could rise twice as high this century as
UN climate scientists have predicted, according to researchers who looked at
what happened more than 100,000 years ago, the last time Earth got this hot.
Experts working on the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have
suggested a maximum 21st century sea level rise -- a key effect of global
climate change -- of about 32 inches (0.8 metres).
But researchers said in a study appearing on Sunday in the journal Nature
Geoscience that the maximum could be twice that, or 64 inches (1.6 metres).
They made the estimate by looking at the so-called interglacial period, some
124,000 to 119,000 years ago, when Earth's climate was warmer than it is now
due to a different configuration of the planet's orbit around the sun.
That was the last time sea levels reached up to 20 feet (6 metres) above
where they are now, fueled by the melting of the ice sheets that cover
Greenland and Antarctica.
The researchers say their study is the first robust documentation of how
quickly sea levels rose to that level.
"Until now, there have been no data that sufficiently constrain the full
rate of past sea level rises above the present level," lead author Eelco
Rohling of Britain's National Oceanography Centre said in a statement.
Rohling and his colleagues found an average sea level rise of 64 inches (1.6
metres) each century during the interglacial period.
Back then, Greenland was 5.4 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit (3 to 5 degrees
Centigrade) warmer than now -- which is similar to the warming period
expected in the next 50 to 100 years, Rohling said.
Current models of ice sheet activity do not predict rates of change this
large, but they do not include many of the dynamic processes already being
observed by glaciologists, the statement said. (Editing by Xavier Briand)
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