Balancing the sea level budget
By having a budget at sea level, we will develop our understanding of the processes that drive change at sea level. A sea level budget monitors sea level change over time at global, regional and local levels. These scales can reveal various factors that contribute to rising water levels, or in some cases falling levels. By measuring the temperature, salinity, mass and altitude of the ocean surface, the relative sources of recent sea level rise can be seen. With these observations, change in sea level is confirmed in terms of the total sea level and its two main components, sea mass and steric sea level (related to density). The sea level budget is closed when the sum of the independent parts agrees with the overall sea level measurement, indicating that the observations can be used to explain the causes of sea level change. So you can see why a budget could be so effective in determining the impact of global warming. “If you want to find out what is driving sea level change, this budget approach is a way to break down these individual components,” said Jennifer Walker, lead author of this study and postdoctoral research at Rutgers University, according to Science Daily. “By learning how different processes change over time and contribute to sea level change, we can more accurately estimate future contributions at specific sites. “And the researchers’ findings are that the rising rates in the six specific locations did not cause any falls in the study period.” The sinking of regional (underground) land was the a key part of sea level change over these long timescales, “Walker explained.
South New Jersey has the fastest rates
Southern New Jersey had the fastest rates over the 2,000-year period: 1.6 millimeters per year (approximately 0.63 inches per decade) at Edwin Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Leeds Point, Atlantic County and 1.5 millimeters per year (approximately 0.6 inches per decade) at Cape May Courthouse, Cape May County. The New Jersey underground is the result of the lasting effects of the withdrawal of “Laurentide ice sheet from our last Ice Age,” Walker told CNN. “The ice sheet disappeared thousands of years ago, and the terrain is still changing from the impact of the past leaf.” Other factors are also involved, including changing ocean currents and extracting groundwater. “Raising sea level rise in the east coast of the U.S. is due to a slowing Gulf Stream,” said Brian McNoldy, senior research associate at the University of Miami Rosenstiel’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, which part of the study. Other sites included in the study were East River Bog in Guilford, Connecticut; Pelham Bay, The Bronx, New York City; Cheesequake State Park in Old Bridge, New Jersey; and Roanoke Island in North Carolina.