Sea level
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- biffvernon
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sea level
Interesting.
Here's something related, just in over on The Huffington Post:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/07/23 ... l?ir=Green
'THE CANADIAN PRESS — ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The greatest iceberg season in recent memory is drawing scores of visitors to Newfoundland's northern peninsula for a glimpse of the majestic sculptures.
"For this time of year, I've never seen so many icebergs — and so big," said Paul Alcock of Northland Discovery Boat Tours in St. Anthony, N.L.
"It's a pretty spectacular sight out here right now," he said of at least 25 icebergs still looming within 16 kilometres of the town.
"For this time of year, you wouldn't expect to see much more than three or four."
The rare extravaganza is thanks to a nearby ice island that was part of a 260-square-kilometre chunk that split from Greenland's Petermann Glacier last August. That original piece has since broken into smaller bits.
One of the largest remaining pieces is the 50-square-kilometre ice island now floating about 20 kilometres off Labrador, south of Cartwright.
As it moves through the water, it "calves" or sheds pieces of ice that create the clusters of icebergs now attracting visitors from across Canada and parts of the U.S., Alcock said'.
Jon
Here's something related, just in over on The Huffington Post:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/07/23 ... l?ir=Green
'THE CANADIAN PRESS — ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The greatest iceberg season in recent memory is drawing scores of visitors to Newfoundland's northern peninsula for a glimpse of the majestic sculptures.
"For this time of year, I've never seen so many icebergs — and so big," said Paul Alcock of Northland Discovery Boat Tours in St. Anthony, N.L.
"It's a pretty spectacular sight out here right now," he said of at least 25 icebergs still looming within 16 kilometres of the town.
"For this time of year, you wouldn't expect to see much more than three or four."
The rare extravaganza is thanks to a nearby ice island that was part of a 260-square-kilometre chunk that split from Greenland's Petermann Glacier last August. That original piece has since broken into smaller bits.
One of the largest remaining pieces is the 50-square-kilometre ice island now floating about 20 kilometres off Labrador, south of Cartwright.
As it moves through the water, it "calves" or sheds pieces of ice that create the clusters of icebergs now attracting visitors from across Canada and parts of the U.S., Alcock said'.
Jon
temperature records across the US
Record temperatures recorded across the US:
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/07 ... normal.php
'In Matt's recent post on hot weather he reported that June Record High Temperatures Beat Record Lows 11-to-1 in US.
Yesterday, the 21st of July, it was hotter than hell across much of the Eastern US.
Nights, which tend to have the daily minimum, were especially unpleasant. Out of 5,569 daily minimums recorded on the 21st, 188 broke previous records and another 138 tied them (exceeding or equaling, respectively, the previous record for daily minimum temperature)'.
Jon
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/07 ... normal.php
'In Matt's recent post on hot weather he reported that June Record High Temperatures Beat Record Lows 11-to-1 in US.
Yesterday, the 21st of July, it was hotter than hell across much of the Eastern US.
Nights, which tend to have the daily minimum, were especially unpleasant. Out of 5,569 daily minimums recorded on the 21st, 188 broke previous records and another 138 tied them (exceeding or equaling, respectively, the previous record for daily minimum temperature)'.
Jon
- biffvernon
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context
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/07 ... n-past.php
'This time, the extreme drought, heat, and wildfires are occurring along with US extremes this year in rainfall, snowfalls, flooding, and tornadoes, and many other stunning temperature and precipitation extremes elsewhere in the world in recent years as well as, as I posted on my TWC Facebook "fan" page, record-shattering 500 millibar heights in lattitudes. And all of this is happening while there's an alarming drop in the amount of Arctic sea ice.
The nature and context of the extremes is the difference between the 1930s and now'.
Jon
'This time, the extreme drought, heat, and wildfires are occurring along with US extremes this year in rainfall, snowfalls, flooding, and tornadoes, and many other stunning temperature and precipitation extremes elsewhere in the world in recent years as well as, as I posted on my TWC Facebook "fan" page, record-shattering 500 millibar heights in lattitudes. And all of this is happening while there's an alarming drop in the amount of Arctic sea ice.
The nature and context of the extremes is the difference between the 1930s and now'.
Jon
- RenewableCandy
- Posts: 12780
- Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 12:13
- Location: York
This will make the UN's job of sea level rise/fall prediction even harder:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2011-262
Nasa desribes this blip as a pothole. As it's the biggest fall in sea level since 1992 (or Nasa's plot range) perhaps it should be considered more a chasm.
I thought sea level rise was supposed to be accelerating?
Another global warming proxy bites the dust.
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2011-262
Nasa desribes this blip as a pothole. As it's the biggest fall in sea level since 1992 (or Nasa's plot range) perhaps it should be considered more a chasm.
I thought sea level rise was supposed to be accelerating?
Another global warming proxy bites the dust.
That's surprising coming from someone who professes to belong to scientific and engineering institutions.An Inspector Calls wrote:Another global warming proxy bites the dust.
Let's see if that trend continues for the next 5 years? If so then you can declare that it's bitten the dust...
Olduvai Theory (Updated) (Reviewed)
Easter Island - a warning from history : http://dieoff.org/page145.htm
Easter Island - a warning from history : http://dieoff.org/page145.htm
Didn't we have this discussion a few months ago? SLR is a function of many processes, influencing mass, temperature and salinity. The very article you link to is clear about the increased continental rainfall transferring mass from oceans to land. That process does nothing to weaken the relationship between sea level and global warming. To say anything sensible about either, you need to unpick all the contributing processes, not just compare the aggregate.An Inspector Calls wrote:Another global warming proxy bites the dust.
If that it were that simple!DominicJ wrote:So,
sea level rise = global warming
sea level fall = weather
?
Sea level rise = sum(mass balance and density change) > 0
Sea level fall = sum(mass balance and density change) < 0
There are lots processes that affect the these eustatic and steric components including some that are to do with global warming (like temperature increase and melting of grounded ice) and some that probably aren't, or at least aren't permanent (like rainfall migrations).
It's quite possible for ocean temperature to increase (decreasing density and increasing volume), for grounded ice mass to decrease, putting more water into the ocean and for increased continental rain to move a greater than compensating volume of water from the ocean onto the land causing a net lowering in sea level.
These processes can all be independently observed so we don't have to draw simple conclusions from the aggregated sea level rise signal, losing information in the process.
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
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Of course people normally talk about the global average sea level. In any specific place, the actual average level of the sea can go up or down by a large amount. For example - melt ice in Greenland, the mass and volume of the ocean increases, however, the sea level in the North Atlantic goes down because the gravitational attraction of the Greenland ice sheet decreases.
But sea level rise is supposed to be accelerating caused by global warming. clv101 can protest all he likes about the complexity of the record (which makes the observation a stupid proxy for global warming in the first place), but it's the CAGW camp that claims that sea level rise is a usable proxy.
http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/wcrp/docu ... 080221.pdf
(Of course, these people were simply comparing the aggregate! Don't you love the straight line drawn through the last decade's records to prove that sea level rise is accelerating? Just a tad selective of start and end points, perhaps. Used to use that trick at school).
As I pointed out, Nasa says this is a blip, probably is, ( Bandidoz), but it does ruin this man's position:
http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2011/03/1 ... t-by-2050/
So it somewhat weakens the position of sea level as a proxy for global warming. Church's straight line is now ruined!
As for sea dropping because the water has been transferred to the land masses: since sea level's dropped by 6 mm, and the ratio sea:land area is 70:30, that means that the average depth (obviously, now possibly in groundwater) on land is 14 mm in a year. Does that seem plausible to everyone? Doesn't to me. And GRACE is reporting groundwater depletion.
http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/wcrp/docu ... 080221.pdf
(Of course, these people were simply comparing the aggregate! Don't you love the straight line drawn through the last decade's records to prove that sea level rise is accelerating? Just a tad selective of start and end points, perhaps. Used to use that trick at school).
As I pointed out, Nasa says this is a blip, probably is, ( Bandidoz), but it does ruin this man's position:
http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2011/03/1 ... t-by-2050/
So it somewhat weakens the position of sea level as a proxy for global warming. Church's straight line is now ruined!
As for sea dropping because the water has been transferred to the land masses: since sea level's dropped by 6 mm, and the ratio sea:land area is 70:30, that means that the average depth (obviously, now possibly in groundwater) on land is 14 mm in a year. Does that seem plausible to everyone? Doesn't to me. And GRACE is reporting groundwater depletion.