Using our new corrected dataset, we estimate a rate of sea level rise of 1.1 mm yr -1 during 1953–2016 (95 % credible interval from 0.6 to 1.6 mm yr -1), and a rate of 7 mm yr -1 during 1997–2016 (95 % credible interval from 5 to 8.8 mm yr -1). T...
The glaciers draining into the Amundsen Sea Embayment (ASE) of West Antarctica are the dominant contributors to sea level rise from the Antarctic Ice Sheet1,2,3. Changes in the mass of these glaciers occur largely due to differences between net snow accumulation over the surface of each glacie...
Sea-level rise calculated from the PSMSL dataset was observed as 1.36 mm/year at the Cox's Bazar station. However, similar calculations from BIWTA in Moheshkhali and Teknaf showed a sea-level fall of 5.59 and 8.33 mm/year, respectively. Additionally, Physical vulnerability of the coast ...
A statistical reassessment of the tide gauge record concludes that sea level rose at a rate of about 1.2 millimetres per year from 1901 to 1990, slightly lower than prior estimates and now consistent with estimates based on individual contributions to se
Sea level rise (SLR) can exert significant stress on highly populated coastal societies and low-lying island countries around the world. Because of this, there is huge societal demand for improved decadal predictions and future projections of SLR, particularly on a local scale along coastlines. Reg...
The presented dataset is available through this link: http://data.jrc.ec.europa.eu/collection/LISCOAST. Future extreme sea levels and flood risk along European coasts will be strongly impacted by global warming. Here, we show changes in all acting components, i.e., sea level rise, tides, ...
sea level rise estimates, but according to the best and worst-case global warming scenarios, sea level may rise between 0.32–0.62 m (scenario SSP1-1.9) and 0.98–1.88 (scenario SSP5-8.5) by the year 2100, with the intermediate scenario (SSP2-4.5) of 0.66–1.33 m of sea level rise....
A geospatial dataset for U.S. hurricane storm surge and sea-level rise vulnerability: Development and case study applications The consequences of future sea-level rise for coastal communities are a priority concern arising from anthropogenic climate change. Here, previously publis... MC Maloney,BL ...
Coastal flood risk assessments require accurate land elevation data. Those to date existed only for limited parts of the world, which has resulted in high uncertainty in projections of land area at risk of sea-level rise (SLR). Here we have applied the first global elevation model derived from...
Coastal response to anthropogenic climate change is of central importance to the infrastructure and inhabitants in these areas. Despite being globally ubiquitous, the stability of rock coasts has been largely neglected, and the expected acceleration of cliff erosion following sea-level rise has not been...