Sea level budget over 2003-2008: A reevaluation from GRACE space gravimetry, satellite altimetry and Argo

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Abstract
From the IPCC 4th Assessment Report published in 2007, ocean thermal expansion contributed by not, vert, similar 50\% to the 3.1 mm/yr observed global mean sea level rise during the 1993\textendash2003 decade, the remaining rate of rise being essentially explained by shrinking of land ice. Recently published results suggest that since about 2003, ocean thermal expansion change, based on the newly deployed Argo system, is showing a plateau while sea level is still rising, although at a reduced rate (not, vert, similar 2.5 mm/yr). Using space gravimetry observations from GRACE, we show that recent years sea level rise can be mostly explained by an increase of the mass of the oceans. Estimating GRACE-based ice sheet mass balance and using published estimates for glaciers melting, we further show that ocean mass increase since 2003 results by about half from an enhanced contribution of the polar ice sheets \textendash compared to the previous decade \textendash and half from mountain glaciers melting. Taking also into account the small GRACE-based contribution from continental waters (< 0.2 mm/yr), we find a total ocean mass contribution of not, vert, similar 2 mm/yr over 2003\textendash2008. Such a value represents not, vert, similar 80\% of the altimetry-based rate of sea level rise over that period. We next estimate the steric sea level (i.e., ocean thermal expansion plus salinity effects) contribution from: (1) the difference between altimetry-based sea level and ocean mass change and (2) Argo data. Inferred steric sea level rate from (1) (not, vert, similar 0.3 mm/yr over 2003\textendash2008) agrees well with the Argo-based value also estimated here (0.37 mm/yr over 2004\textendash2008). Furthermore, the sea level budget approach presented in this study allows us to constrain independent estimates of the Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) correction applied to GRACE-based ocean and ice sheet mass changes, as well as of glaciers melting. Values for the GIA correction and glacier contribution needed to close the sea level budget and explain GRACE-based mass estimates over the recent years agree well with totally independent determinations.
Year of Publication
2009
Journal
Global and Planetary Change
Volume
65
Number of Pages
83-88
Date Published
01/2009
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009GPC....65...83C
DOI
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2008.10.004
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