Home

sealevel

Sealevel, more commonly written as sea level, or mean sea level (MSL), is the average height of the world’s oceans relative to a reference surface. It is used as a baseline for measuring elevations and coastal landforms. Sealevel is not fixed; it varies regionally and over time due to tides, atmospheric pressure, winds, ocean circulation, and thermal expansion. Short-term fluctuations arise from tides and storms, while longer-term trends reflect climate processes and land motion.

Global sealevel has risen over the past century. Current estimates place the rise since 1900 at about

Impacts from rising sealevel include increased coastal flooding, higher storm-surge risk, shoreline erosion, and saltwater intrusion

0.2
to
0.3
meters,
with
an
acceleration
in
recent
decades.
The
principal
drivers
are
thermal
expansion
of
seawater
as
it
warms
and
the
loss
of
mass
from
glaciers
and
ice
sheets
in
Greenland,
Antarctica,
and
mountainous
regions.
Other
contributions
include
changes
in
land
water
storage
and
post-glacial
rebound.
Sealevel
is
measured
with
tide
gauges
and
satellite
altimeters;
local
levels
are
also
affected
by
vertical
land
motion
and
gravity
field
changes.
into
freshwater
aquifers.
Projections
for
2100
depend
on
future
emissions
and
ice-sheet
behavior;
typical
ranges
span
about
0.3
to
1.0
meters,
with
higher
estimates
if
large
ice
losses
occur.
Adaptation
strategies
include
coastal
defenses,
managed
retreat,
and
land-use
planning
that
accounts
for
rising
seas
and
local
subsidence.