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Sea level rise of 1 meter within 100 years
January 08, 2009
New research indicates that the ocean could rise in the next 100 years to a meter higher than the current sea level - which is three times higher than predictions from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC. The groundbreaking new results from an international collaboration between researchers from the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen, England and Finland are published in the scientific journal Climate Dynamics. According to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change the global climate in the coming century will be 2-4 degrees warmer than today, but the ocean is much slower to warm up than the air and the large ice sheets on Greenland and Antarctica are also slower to melt. The great uncertainty in the calculation of the future rise in the sea level lies in the uncertainty over how quickly the ice sheets on land will melt and flow out to sea. The model predictions of the melting of the ice sheets are the basis for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's predictions for the rise in sea level are not capable of showing the rapid changes observed in recent years. The new research has therefore taken a different approach. Looking at the direct correlation "Instead of making calculations based on what one believes will happen with the melting of the ice sheets we have made calculations based on what has actually happened in the past. We have looked at the direct relationship between the global temperature and the sea level 2000 years into the past", explains Aslak Grinsted, who is a geophysicist at the Centre for Ice and Climate at the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen. With the help of annual growth rings of trees and analysis from ice core borings researchers have been able to calculate the temperature for the global climate 2000 years back in time. For around 300 years the sea level has been closely observed in several places around the world and in addition to that there is historical knowledge of the sea level of the past in different places in the world. By linking the two sets of information together Aslak Grinsted could see the relationship between temperature and sea level. For example, in the Middle Ages around 12th century there was a warm period where the sea level was approximately 20 cm higher than today and in the 18th century there was the 'little ice age', where the sea level was approximately 25 cm lower than it is today. A rise in sea level in the future as in the past Assuming that the climate in the coming century will be three degrees warmer, the new model predictions indicate that the ocean will rise between 0,9 and 1,3 meters. To rise so much so quickly means that the ice sheets will melt much faster than previously believed. But it has already been observed that the ice sheets react quicker to increases in temperature than experts thought just a few years ago. And studies from the ice age show that ice sheets can melt quickly. When the ice age ended 11.700 years ago, the ice sheets melted so quickly that sea level rose 11 millimeters per year - equivalent to a meter in 100 years. In the current situation with global warming, Aslak Grinsted believes, that the sea level will rise with the same speed - that is to say a meter in the span of the next 100 years. University of Copenhagen

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Sea Level
by Lions Gate (Publisher)
Pup, a bamboo shark, discovers egg sacs while playing around the ocean with his friends. When he sees human poachers stealing the eggs from his reef, Pup makes it his mission to save his family. As he leaves the sea and enters the beautiful, yet dangerous, world of humans he'll prove he isn't too small to save his family.
Languages: English
Subtitles: English & Spanish
Special Features:
- Behind the Scenes
- Sculpture Design
- Concept Art
- Trailer Gallery
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Sea Level
by Nancy Kilgore (Author)
Brigid Peterson is the new minister in the remote seaside town of Sand Hill. The year is 1980 and her parishioners are wary and even hostile to a woman in the pulpit. She finds a kindred spirit in her new friend Mary Bradley, an artist who believes in the goddess. But Mary has fallen hopelessly in love with a local drifter, and Brigid's marriage is beginning to crumble, and when Brigid preaches about the female side of God, the whole town divides over her. Both women have to dive deeper into their spiritual life to find the way through. Sea Level is a story about ordinary small town life, the mystical landscape of the Delmarva Peninsula, and the passions that erupt over conflicts of belief.
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Sea Level: Adventures of a Saltwater Angler
by Jeffrey Cardenas (Author)
Sea Level, by Jeffrey Cardenas, author of the acclaimed Marquesa, is a collection of vivid essays on saltwater fly fishing written over the past twenty years. This book is a pure delight--so filled with fresh original language that it forms a unique portrait of an artist, a writer, and an expert angler and naturalist. And it is the author's quiet, observant and steady hand that guides us on a wide range of adventures: from the Gulf Coast to Cuba; from the Florida Keys and Bahamas to the North Atlantic. Sea Level exudes the highest level of angling skill and will be required reading for years to come.
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Ocean Creatures Library (A Set of 5 "I Love Reading" Level 2 Readers)
The Ocean Creatures Library brings together 5 popular level 2 books from the "I Love Reading" series.
Young readers will learn about the starfish, seahorse, octopus, jellyfish and shark. Bright, colorful photography and bold text will keep young readers engaged. Information presented includes facts about how each animal eats, moves, and survives.
By bestselling children's author Cindy Bracken.
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DK Readers: Pirates: Raiders of the High Seas (Level 4: Proficient Readers)
by Christopher Maynard (Author), Harriet Griffey (Author), Harriet Griffey (Contributor)
Meet Pirates who got away with murder... and pirates who died in the hangman's noose! These 48-page books about fascinating subjects like pirates, mummies, and volcanoes are for proficient readers who can understand a rich vocabulary and challenging sentence structure. In addition to the stunning photographs, informative sidebars, and glossary, readers will find archival photographs and paintings. Averaging 4,500 to 5,000 words in length, Level 4 books are 40 percent pictures and 40 percent text. The Dorling Kindersley Readers combine an enticing visual layout with high-interest, easy-to-read stories to captivate and delight young bookworms who are just getting started. Written by leading children's authors and compiled in consultation with literacy experts, these engaging books build...
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DK Readers: Disasters at Sea (Level 3: Reading Alone)
by Andrew Donkin (Author)
From fog, ice, and rocks to cannon fire and torpedo attacks--read the story of five doomed sea voyages and the fate of those who took part in them. The 48-page Level 3 books, designed for children who can read on their own, contain more complex sentence structure and more detail. Young readers will devour these kid-friendly titles, which cover high-interest topics such as sharks, and the Bermuda Triangle, as well as classics like Aladdin. Information boxes highlight historical references, trivia, pronunciation, and other facts about words and names mentioned. Averaging 2,400 to 2,800 words, these books offer a 50/50 picture-to-text ratio. The Dorling Kindersley Readers combine an enticing visual layout with high-interest, easy-to-read stories to captivate and delight young bookworms who...
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Under the Sea (Beginners Nature: Level 1)
by Fiona Patchett (Author), Tetsuo Kushii (Illustrator), Zoe Wray (Illustrator)
What lives at the bottom of the sea? What does a shark really eat? How does a sea horse swim? In this book you'll find the answers and lots more about the fascinating things which live under the sea.
Under the Sea is part of an exciting series of books for children who are beginning to read on their own. The easy-to-read text has been specially written with the help of a reading expert.
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Dive! A Book Of Deep Sea Creatures (level 3) (Hello Reader, Science)
by Mel Berger (Author)
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The Sedimentary Record of Sea-Level Change
by Angela L. Coe (Author), Dan W. J. Bosence (Author), Kevin D. Church (Author), Stephen S. Flint (Author), John A. Howell (Author), R. Chris L. Wilson (Author)
This illustrated textbook describes how past changes in sea-level can be detected through an analysis of the sedimentary record, and how sequence stratigraphy techniques can provide explanations of how the sedimentary system evolves through geological time. Designed for use in undergraduate and graduate courses, it includes detailed case studies, set-aside focus boxes, and bulleted Questions and Answers interspersed throughout. The book is also supported by a website hosting sample pages.
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Sea Level
by Sea Level (Author)
Track:
1. Rain In Spain 6:47
2. Shake A Leg 3:53
3. Tidal Wave 5:40
4. Country Fool 3:40
5. Nothing Matters But The Fever 7:20
6. Grand Larceny 5:23
7. Scarborough Fair 5:31
8. Just A Good Feeling 3:01
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