Communications Earth & Environment (Nov 2021)

Ocean mass, sterodynamic effects, and vertical land motion largely explain US coast relative sea level rise

  • T. C. Harvey,
  • B. D. Hamlington,
  • T. Frederikse,
  • R. S. Nerem,
  • C. G. Piecuch,
  • W. C. Hammond,
  • G. Blewitt,
  • P. R. Thompson,
  • D. P. S. Bekaert,
  • F. W. Landerer,
  • J. T. Reager,
  • R. E. Kopp,
  • H. Chandanpurkar,
  • I. Fenty,
  • D. Trossman,
  • J. S. Walker,
  • C. Boening

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-021-00300-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Tide gauge observations of relative sea-level trends between 1993 and 2018 around the contiguous United States can largely be attributed to a combination of changes in ocean mass, sterodynamic effects and vertical land motion, according to a sea-level budgeting exercise.