by Viv Forbes
The most careful analysis of world sea levels
suggests they are rising at between zero and 2mm per year. Measurements to this
accuracy are questionable as they are complicated by changes in ocean currents
and wind direction, and shorelines that may rise and sink.
Sea levels are never still, but with global temperatures flat and snow cover and polar ice steady, sea levels are probably as stable today as they ever get.
Sea levels are never still, but with global temperatures flat and snow cover and polar ice steady, sea levels are probably as stable today as they ever get.
Image sourced [here] |
However, we still have creative climatists concocting complex computer models that predict dangerously rising seas to justify their goal to ban coastal development and to revive their failing war on carbon.
Alarmists should study earth history.
At the depth of our recent ice age, just 16,000 years ago, a thick sheet of ice covered much of North America and Northern Europe.
So much water was locked up in ice that humans
could walk on dry land from London to Paris, from Siberia to Alaska and from
New Guinea to Australia. The River Rhine flowed across a broad coastal plain
(which is now the North Sea) and met the Atlantic Ocean up between Scotland and
Norway.
image sourced [here] |
There was no Great Barrier Reef as Queensland’s continental shelf was part of
the coastal plain, and rivers like the Burdekin met the ocean about 160 km east
of its current mouth. Most of its ancestral river channel can still be
recognised beneath the Coral Sea.
Then, about 13,000 years ago, with no help from man-made engines burning hydrocarbons, the Earth began warming. This was probably caused by natural cycles affecting our sun and the solar system, aided by volcanic heat along Earth’s Rings of Fire under the oceans.
The great ice sheets melted, sea levels rapidly rose some 130m and coastal settlements and ancient port cities were drowned and are being rediscovered, even today
Then, about 13,000 years ago, with no help from man-made engines burning hydrocarbons, the Earth began warming. This was probably caused by natural cycles affecting our sun and the solar system, aided by volcanic heat along Earth’s Rings of Fire under the oceans.
The great ice sheets melted, sea levels rapidly rose some 130m and coastal settlements and ancient port cities were drowned and are being rediscovered, even today
As the oceans warmed, they expelled much of
their dissolved load of carbon dioxide. The warm temperatures and extra carbon
dioxide plant food caused vigorous plant growth. Permafrost melted, forests
colonised the treeless tundra and grasses and herbs covered the great plains.
Iceball Earth became the Blue/green planet, supporting a huge increase in plant
and animal life.
Without any zoning laws to guide them, our smart ancestors moved ahead of the rising waters and adapted happily to the warmer climate with less snow, more rain, more carbon dioxide plant food and more ice-free land.
This warming phase peaked in the Medieval Warm Era about 1,000 years ago, when sea levels also peaked. They fell during the Little Ice Age, rose slightly during the Modern Warm Era, and are relatively stable now.
Rising seas are never a lethal threat to life on Earth. The danger sign is falling sea levels caused by a return of the great ice sheets. This would quickly put high-latitude farming into the deep freezer, thus creating widespread starvation. Trying to grow crops on emerging salty mudflats in an icy climate will give some future farmers a real climate concern.
And despite World Heritage listing, when the next ice age comes the skeletons of the stranded Great Barrier Reef will become bleached limestone deposits on the coastal plain. The indestructible coral populations will abandon their marooned homes and build new reefs further out under the retreating seas.
For those who would
like to read more:
Ice Age Europe
http://donsmaps.com/icemaps.html
Nothing New about Rising sea levels:
http://carbon-sense.com/2013/11/30/nothing-new-about-climate-change/
Sea levels were probably been higher than this during the Medieval Warming, and fell in the Little Ice Age:
http://carbon-sense.com/2013/12/02/endlich-sea-level-claims/
The Buried Burdekin River Channel
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/geosciencefacpub/386/
Sea level in the southwest pacific is stable:
http://carbon-sense.com/2010/01/01/south-pacific-sea-level-changes/
Without any zoning laws to guide them, our smart ancestors moved ahead of the rising waters and adapted happily to the warmer climate with less snow, more rain, more carbon dioxide plant food and more ice-free land.
This warming phase peaked in the Medieval Warm Era about 1,000 years ago, when sea levels also peaked. They fell during the Little Ice Age, rose slightly during the Modern Warm Era, and are relatively stable now.
Rising seas are never a lethal threat to life on Earth. The danger sign is falling sea levels caused by a return of the great ice sheets. This would quickly put high-latitude farming into the deep freezer, thus creating widespread starvation. Trying to grow crops on emerging salty mudflats in an icy climate will give some future farmers a real climate concern.
And despite World Heritage listing, when the next ice age comes the skeletons of the stranded Great Barrier Reef will become bleached limestone deposits on the coastal plain. The indestructible coral populations will abandon their marooned homes and build new reefs further out under the retreating seas.
Image sourced [here] |
Ice Age Europe
http://donsmaps.com/icemaps.html
Nothing New about Rising sea levels:
http://carbon-sense.com/2013/11/30/nothing-new-about-climate-change/
Sea levels were probably been higher than this during the Medieval Warming, and fell in the Little Ice Age:
http://carbon-sense.com/2013/12/02/endlich-sea-level-claims/
The Buried Burdekin River Channel
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/geosciencefacpub/386/
Sea level in the southwest pacific is stable:
http://carbon-sense.com/2010/01/01/south-pacific-sea-level-changes/
The vast amounts of rain that fell during the Australian floods in 2010 and 2011 caused the world's sea levels to drop by as much as 7mm, according to oceanographers.
ReplyDeleteIn 2010, sea levels mysteriously dropped by 7mm and stayed lower than expected for a year and a half. Oceanographers attempted to work out where the water had gone; they found it in Australia.
In most places on the globe, rain falls on mountains, runs into rivers and flows out into the sea. But in Australia, something different tends to happen. Rain that falls in the outback never makes it to the coast -- it tends to collect in shallow inland seas and evaporate instead.
When this rain event was happening we had the alarmists claiming that the oceans would rise because of all of the rain that was falling but then scientists from around the world shot their theories down in flames and it transpired that, instead of all that rain making the oceans RISE, it actually did the opposite.
So where does that put the alarmists who claim that global warming or is it climate change now? or is it the greenhouse effect now? or is it the ozone layer again causing all of the problems.
Will the Global warming alarmists sit on their hands and NOT MENTION the DROP in ocean levels and will they then claim that the oceans are rising as they rise back to the levels before this rain event? Don't mention that a natural event lowered the oceans in just one rain event, but do not dare that the next 7mm that the ocean rises is simply a natural event where the ocean depth moves back to it's normal height.
I might add that during the 2010/11 rain event, we recorded 62 inches of rain over a 60 hour period at Mt Larcom Township where I live.
DeleteRegarding the role of carbon dioxide I very strongly recommend reading my website http://whyitsnotco2.com (being visited by hundreds each day) and/or my book "Why It's Not Carbon Dioxide After All" on Amazon and eBay Australia.
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