Oceanography, Natural Terrain - Oceans & Seas
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Overview
An increase in sea level is one of the more feared and certain consequences of global warming. Beach erosion, increased vulnerability to coastal storms, flooding, and accelerated ecosystem destruction inevitably accompany an increase in sea level. At special risk are the 100 million persons living within a meter of present-day mean sea level and the coastal development valued in the trillions of dollars. Sea Level Rise: History and Consequences surveys the history of sea level change since the last deglaciation began approximately 20,000 years ago, when global sea level was about 125 meters lower than now. Topics covered include sea level as an elevation reference, historic and modern sea level measurements including satellite techniques, the earth's response to the melting of the great glaciers, and how sea level rise in the 20th century has impacted coastal habitability. This volume provide a substantial survey of the surprisingly complex topic of sea level change for professionals and students of the earth and environmental sciences."This is a welcome compilation of what is known about sea level, by the people who have done the definitive work. The book considers separately the last 20,000 years when sea level was dominated by glacial melting, the last milennium, and the last century when recording tide gauges became available. Glacial melting now contributes less than 20%, the present rate of 1.9mm/year is dominated by thermal expansion. We are heading into an age where human activities (global warming, ground water extraction) might be the dominant factor. Satellite altimetry will become a dominant observational tool. All this conspires to make the book a timely contribution."
Audience: Geologists, geophysicists, climatologists, oceanographers, meteorologists, environmental scientists, geomorphologists, coastal engineers, policy makers in all mentioned fields.
Editorials
EOS
...recommended reading for all researchers and students trying to understand the complexity of sea level change and its impacts.International Journal Of Marine And Coastal Law
Each chapter is supported with several figures and tables and comprehensive bibliographies. The satisfactory index and the detailed table of contents makes it easy for the reader to go quickly to any matter of special importance.Booknews
For professionals and students of the earth and environmental sciences, US researchers survey the history of sea level change since the last deglaciation began about 21,000 years ago, when the global sea level was about 125 meters lower than now. Among their topics are sea level as an elevation reference, satellites and other means for measuring it, the earth's response to the melting of the great glaciers, and how sea level rise during the 20th century has impacted coast habitability. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
October 5, 2000
Publisher
Academic Press
Pages
232
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780122213458