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A projection of future sea level
Authors:Johannes Oerlemans
Institution:(1) Institute of Meteorology and Oceanography University of Utrecht, Princetonplein 5, Utrecht, The Netherlands;(2) Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, F.R.G.
Abstract:Evidence is reviewed that suggests faster sea-level rise when climate gets warmer. Four processes appear as dominating on a time scale of decades to centuries: melting of mountain glaciers and small ice caps, changes in the mass balance of the large polar ice sheets (Greenland, Antarctica), possible ice-flow instabilities (in particular on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet), and thermal expansion of ocean water.For a given temperature scenario, an attempt is made to estimate the different contributions. The calculation yields a figure of 9.5 cm of sea-level rise since 1850 AD, which is within the uncertainty range of estimates of the lsquoobservedrsquo rise.A further 33 cm rise is found as most likely for the year 2050, but the uncertainty is very large (sgr = 32 cm). The contribution from melting of land ice is of the same order of magnitude as thermal expansion. The mass-balance effects of the major ice sheets tend to cancel to some extent (increasing accumulation on Antarctica, increasing ablation on Greenland). For the year 2100 a value of 66 cm above the present-day stand is found (sgr = 57 cm). The estimates of the standard deviation include uncertainty in the temperature scenario, as presented elsewhere in this volume.
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