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Effects of climate change and sea-level rise on coastal habitat: Vulnerability assessment, adaptation strategies and policy recommendations.

Journal of Environmental Management, 2023
On a first-order basis, the global "sea level rise" induced by climate change magnifies coastal land subsidence. Various research related to this discipline is associated with estimated sea level vulnerability in various spatial scales. But the potential
Paramita Roy   +5 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Sea Level Change

Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences, 2001
Two characteristics of climate change are resulting in sea level rise. First, the melting of ice sheets and glaciers on land are adding more water to the oceans. Second, ocean temperatures are increasing, leading to ocean thermal expansion. For more than
John A. Church, Jonathan M. Gregory
openaire   +2 more sources

Sea level change

2013
This chapter considers changes in global mean sea level, regional sea level, sea level extremes, and waves. Confidence in projections of global mean sea level rise has increased since the Fourth Assessment Report(AR4) because of the improved physical understanding of the components of sea level, the improved agreement of process-based models with ...
Church J., A.   +13 more
semanticscholar   +7 more sources

The magnitude and cause of short-term eustatic Cretaceous sea-level change: A synthesis

Earth-Science Reviews, 2019
No consensus currently exists regarding the magnitude of Cretaceous short-term (less than 3 Ma in duration) eustatic sea-level change. The lack of a consensus limits the ability to predict sedimentary facies and architecture and to assess the potential ...
David C. Ray   +6 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

A global analysis of subsidence, relative sea-level change and coastal flood exposure

Nature Climate Change, 2021
R. Nicholls   +8 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

The Phanerozoic Record of Global Sea-Level Change

Science, 2005
K. Miller   +9 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Sea-Level Changes

2015
Sea levels are always changing, for many reasons. Some changes are rapid, while others take place very slowly. The changes can be local, or extend globally. Sea levels, particularly extremes, are important for coastal flooding and coral reef development, both of which may be impacted by climate change.
Pugh, David T., Abualnaja, Yasser
openaire   +3 more sources

Sea-Level Changes

2004
In earlier times many geologists clearly became cynical about what they had learned as students about Earth history from their stratigraphy courses. ‘The sea comes in, the sea goes out.’ This is indeed one of the most striking signals that emerges from study of the stratigraphic record in a given region: a succession of marine transgressions and ...
Roberto Sabadini, Bert Vermeersen
openaire   +2 more sources

Sea-level change as the driver for lake formation in the Yangtze Plain – A review

Global and Planetary Change, 2019
The Yangtze Plain (floodplains in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River) is a region with numerous lakes, including the three largest freshwater lakes in China, i.e. Poyang Lake (PYL), Dongting Lake (DTL), and Taihu Lake (THL).
Yantian Xu, Z. Lai, Chang’an Li
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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