Contribution of climate-driven change in continental water storage to recent sea-level rise

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Abstract
Using a global model of continental water balance, forced by interannual variations in precipitation and near-surface atmospheric temperature for the period 1981-1998, we estimate the sea-level changes associated with climate-driven changes in storage of water as snowpack, soil water, and ground water; storage in ice sheets and large lakes is not considered. The 1981-1998 trend is estimated to be 0.12 mm/yr, and substantial interannual fluctuations are inferred; for 1993-1998, the trend is 0.25 mm/yr. At the decadal time scale, the terrestrial contribution to eustatic (i.e., induced by mass exchange) sea-level rise is significantly smaller than the estimated steric (i.e., induced by density changes) trend for the same period, but is not negligibly small. In the model the sea-level rise is driven mainly by a downtrend in continental precipitation during the study period, which we believe was generated by natural variability in the climate system.
Year of Publication
2003
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
Volume
100
Number of Pages
13158-13161
Date Published
11/2003
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2003PNAS..10013158M
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2134014100
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