The seas are creeping higher as the planet warms. But how high could they go?
Projections for the year 2100 range from inches to several feet, or even more.
The sub-tropical islands of Bermuda and the Bahamas are two seemingly unlikely places scientists have gone looking for answers.
The cliffs and ancient reefs on Bermuda and the Bahamas have lured fossil-hunters for decades. The land on the Bahamas, for example, has a foundation of fossil coral; the stone is derived from the disintegration of age-old coral reefs and seashells.
Credit: Paul Hearty
These areas are now attracting scientists investigating global sea level rise.
By pinpointing where the shorelines stood on cliffs and coral reefs in the Bahamas and Bermuda during an extremely warm period 400,000 years ago, researchers hope to narrow the range of global sea-level projections for the future.
Credit: NASA
In its most recent report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimated that the seas could rise up to two feet by 2100.
That number could go higher depending on the amount of ice melt and the quantity of greenhouse gas emissions.
The United Nations estimates a five feet sea-level rise would be enough to swamp 17 million people in low-lying Bangladesh alone.
The new study factors in the loading and unloading of ice from North America during the ice ages preceding the long-ago sea-level rise.
As the ice sheets grew, their weight pushed down the land beneath them while causing land at the edges--Bermuda and the Bahamas--to bulge upward, says Raymo.
Credit: NASA
When the ice pulled back, the continent rebounded, and the islands sank.
"We're re-thinking many of our estimates of past sea-level rise now that we're more aware of the effects of unloading of ice," said Bil Haq, program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Ocean Sciences, which funded the research. "We now have a meaningful way of calculating the rebound.
"This study is a good example of collaboration between paleoceanography and geophysics to resolve an important issue: the question of future sea-level rise."
Credit: Government of the Bahamas
Today, both Greenland and West Antarctica are losing mass in a warming world, but signals from East Antarctica are less clear.
Raymo said the research helps show that "catastrophic collapse" of the East Antarctic ice is probably not a threat today.
"However, we do need to worry about Greenland and West Antarctica."
Contacts and sources:
Cheryl Dybas
National Science Foundation
Projections for the year 2100 range from inches to several feet, or even more.
The sub-tropical islands of Bermuda and the Bahamas are two seemingly unlikely places scientists have gone looking for answers.
The cliffs and ancient reefs on Bermuda and the Bahamas have lured fossil-hunters for decades. The land on the Bahamas, for example, has a foundation of fossil coral; the stone is derived from the disintegration of age-old coral reefs and seashells.
New explanation for why beach deposits in the Bahamas are 70 feet above sea level.
These areas are now attracting scientists investigating global sea level rise.
By pinpointing where the shorelines stood on cliffs and coral reefs in the Bahamas and Bermuda during an extremely warm period 400,000 years ago, researchers hope to narrow the range of global sea-level projections for the future.
Will the fate of the Bahamas in a time of sea-level rise mirror that of other coastal locales?
Credit: Government of the Bahamas
After correcting for what they say was sinking of these islands at that time, scientists estimate that the seas rose 20 feet to 43 feet higher than today--up to a third less than previous estimates, though still a drastic change.
The study infers that the Greenland and West Antarctica ice sheets collapsed during the ancient warm period, but that ice loss from the vast East Antarctic Ice Sheet was negligible.
The results are reported in this week's issue of the journalNature.
"Our research provides a simple explanation for high beach deposits [such as fossils in the Bahamas]," said the paper's lead author Maureen Raymo, a scientist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
Average global sea-level rose eight inches since the 1880s, and is currently rising an inch per decade, driven by thermal expansion of seawater and melting of glaciers and ice sheets, including the still mostly intact ice in Greenland and West Antarctica.
After correcting for what they say was sinking of these islands at that time, scientists estimate that the seas rose 20 feet to 43 feet higher than today--up to a third less than previous estimates, though still a drastic change.
The study infers that the Greenland and West Antarctica ice sheets collapsed during the ancient warm period, but that ice loss from the vast East Antarctic Ice Sheet was negligible.
The results are reported in this week's issue of the journalNature.
"Our research provides a simple explanation for high beach deposits [such as fossils in the Bahamas]," said the paper's lead author Maureen Raymo, a scientist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
Average global sea-level rose eight inches since the 1880s, and is currently rising an inch per decade, driven by thermal expansion of seawater and melting of glaciers and ice sheets, including the still mostly intact ice in Greenland and West Antarctica.
The islands of the Bahamas and their fossil cliffs contain clues to sea-level rise.
In its most recent report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimated that the seas could rise up to two feet by 2100.
That number could go higher depending on the amount of ice melt and the quantity of greenhouse gas emissions.
The United Nations estimates a five feet sea-level rise would be enough to swamp 17 million people in low-lying Bangladesh alone.
The new study factors in the loading and unloading of ice from North America during the ice ages preceding the long-ago sea-level rise.
As the ice sheets grew, their weight pushed down the land beneath them while causing land at the edges--Bermuda and the Bahamas--to bulge upward, says Raymo.
Eleuthera in the Bahamas: echoes of ancient climate change reverberate there.
When the ice pulled back, the continent rebounded, and the islands sank.
"We're re-thinking many of our estimates of past sea-level rise now that we're more aware of the effects of unloading of ice," said Bil Haq, program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Ocean Sciences, which funded the research. "We now have a meaningful way of calculating the rebound.
"This study is a good example of collaboration between paleoceanography and geophysics to resolve an important issue: the question of future sea-level rise."
Will low-lying shorelines around the world--such as the Bahamas--someday be underwater?
Today, both Greenland and West Antarctica are losing mass in a warming world, but signals from East Antarctica are less clear.
Raymo said the research helps show that "catastrophic collapse" of the East Antarctic ice is probably not a threat today.
"However, we do need to worry about Greenland and West Antarctica."
Cheryl Dybas
National Science Foundation
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