Scientists
pin down historic sea level rise
Reuters
From LONDON (Reuters) - The collapse of an ice sheet in
Antarctica up to 14,650 years ago might have caused sea levels to rise
between 14 and 18 metres (46-60 feet), a study showed on Wednesday, data which
could help make more accurate climate change predictions.
The melting of polar ice could contribute to
long-term sea level rise, threatening the lives of millions, scientists say.
Sea
levels have increased on average about 18 centimetres (7 inches) since 1900 and
rapid global warming will accelerate the pace of the increase, experts say,
putting coastlines at risk and forcing low-lying cities to build costly sea
defences.
Scientists
last month said that thinning glaciers and ice caps were pushing up sea levels
by 1.5 millimetres a year, and experts forecast an increase of as much as two
metres by 2100.
A very
rapid sea level rise is thought to have occurred 14,650 years ago but details
about the event have been unclear.
Some
past sea level records have suggested glacier melt led to a 20 metre increase
in less than 500 years.
But
uncertainty lingered about the source of the melt, its force and its link to
the changes in climate.
A team
of scientists, including researchers from France's Aix-Marseille University and
the University of Tokyo, claim to have solved the mystery which may shed light
on climate change.
They
reconstructed sea level changes by analysing samples of coral collected from
reefs in Tahiti and dated them to determine the extent and timing of the sea
level rise.
"Our
results ... reveal that the increase in sea level in Tahiti was
between 12 and 22 metres, with a most probable value between 14 and 18 metres,
establishing a significant meltwater contribution from the southern
hemisphere," said the authors of the study published in the journal
Nature.
This
implies the rate of sea level rise was more than 40 millimetres a year, they
said.
A U.N.
climate panel on Wednesday said all nations will be vulnerable to the expected
increase in heat waves, intense rains, floods and a probably rise in the
intensity of droughts.
(Reporting
by Nina Chestney; Editing by Louise Ireland)
No comments:
Post a Comment