Reanalysis of ancient eclipse, astronomic and geodetic data: A possible route to resolving the enigma of global sea-level rise

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Keywords
Abstract
Predictions of the Earth\textquoterights response to the ice age appear to simultaneously reconcile a set of astronomical, geodetic and ancient eclipse observations related to changes in rotation, thus ruling out ice melting as a major contributor to 20th century sea-level rise. We demonstrate that the reconciliation disappears when an improved theory of rotational stability is applied. Furthermore, our reanalysis of longer satellite records renders previous estimates of the secular change in rotation rate suspect. The updated ice-age predictions and observations permit an anomalous 20th century ice flux of \~1 mm/yr equivalent sea-level rise. Thus, the full suite of Earth rotation observations are consistent with a connection between climatic warming and recent melting of ice reservoirs.
Year of Publication
2006
Journal
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume
243
Number of Pages
390-399
Date Published
03/2006
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2006E\%26PSL.243..390M
DOI
10.1016/j.epsl.2005.12.029
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