Abstract
Sea level change is generally taken to indicate climate change and may be more nearly global than what we perceive to be climate change. Close to the beach, even a small sea level change (such as 1-3 m) produces important changes in local depositional conditions. This effect can be deduced from a study of properly selected beach deposits. Various measures of beach-sand grain size indicate conditions of deposition. The best of these parameters is the kurtosis; it is a reliable indicator of surf-zone wave energy density. An abrupt energy-level shift, after centuries with little change, indicates sea level rise or drop. Predictions about what sea level will do in the near future should be based on the many small changes (1 to 3 m) in the last few thousand years, rather than on the arbitrary, fictitious, and unrealistic absolute sea level that appears to underlie various popular forecasts. -from Author
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tanner, W. F. (1992). 3000 years of sea level change. Bulletin - American Meteorological Society, 73(3), 297–303. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0477(1992)073<0297:YOSLC>2.0.CO;2
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