Climate Change: 2002 Publications
Author: Munk,
W.
Title:
Twentieth century
sea level: An enigma.
Publication: Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences 99(10): 6550-6555, 2002.
© National
Academy of Sciences
Notes : Changes
in sea level (relative to the moving crust) are associated with changes in
ocean volume (mostly thermal expansion) and in ocean mass (melting and continental
storage): zeta(t) = zetasteric(t) + zetaeustatic(t). Recent compilations of
global ocean temperatures by Levitus and coworkers are in accord with coupled
ocean/atmosphere modeling of greenhouse warming; they yield an increase in
20th century ocean heat content by 2 x 1023 J (compared to 0.1 x 1023 J of
atmospheric storage), which corresponds to zetagreenhouse(2000) = 3 cm. The
greenhouse-related rate is accelerating, with a present value greenhouse(2000)
~6 cm/century. Tide records going back to the 19th century show no measurable
acceleration throughout the late 19th and first half of the 20th century;
we take zetahistoric = 18 cm/century. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change attributes about 6 cm/century to melting and other eustatic processes,
leaving a residual of 12 cm of 20th century rise to be accounted for. The
Levitus compilation has virtually foreclosed the attribution of the residual
rise to ocean warming (notwithstanding our ignorance of the abyssal and Southern
Oceans): the historic rise started too early, has too linear a trend, and
is too large. Melting of polar ice sheets at the upper limit of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change estimates could close the gap, but severe limits are
imposed by the observed perturbations in Earth rotation. Among possible resolutions
of the enigma are: a substantial reduction from traditional estimates (including
ours) of 1.5-2 mm/y global sea level rise; a substantial increase in the estimates
of 20th century ocean heat storage; and a substantial change in the interpretation
of the astronomic record.
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