WOCE and BEYOND WOCE and BEYOND Nov. 2002 Sea Level Rise: Can we explain what we measure? Anny Cazenave LEGOS-GRGS/CNES Toulouse, France.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Clima en España: Pasado, presente y futuro Madrid, Spain, 11 – 13 February 1 IMEDEA (UIB - CSIC), Mallorca, SPAIN. 2 National Oceanography Centre, Southampton,
Advertisements

Estimates of Global Sea Level Change from Tide Gauges Sampling Issues 20th Century Global Sea Level (GSL) Rise Estimates Average of Trends (Douglas et.
1 Sea-Level changes. What causes the sea level to change over time? Questions:
Glacial Isostatic Adjustment Contributions to Tide Gauge, Altimetry and GRACE Observations Glenn Milne Dept of Earth Sciences University of Durham, UK.
Present-Day Sea Level Change Present-Day Sea Level Change Assessment and Key Uncertainties Anny Cazenave Anny Cazenave LEGOS, Toulouse.
Monitoring and Predicting Long Term Global Sea and Land Level Changes Philip L. Woodworth Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level Proudman Oceanographic.
Cheryl Gann NCSSM Instructor of Mathematics Special Thanks to Linda Schmalbeck, NCSSM Instructor of Biology, for the activity inspiration.
3. Climate Change 3.1 Observations 3.2 Theory of Climate Change 3.3 Climate Change Prediction 3.4 The IPCC Process.
Sea Level Change Observation Status on the elements of the puzzle Christian Le Provost LEGOS / CNRS Toulouse, France.
Consequences of Global climate Change. Impact of Global Warming Sea level rising Altered precipitation pattern Change in soil moisture content Increase.
One estimate of global water distribution Volume (1000 km 3 ) Percent of Total Water Percent of Fresh Water Oceans, Seas, & Bays1,338, Ice caps,
Principles of Sea Level Measurement Long-term tide gauge records  What is a tide station?  How is sea level measured relative to the land?  What types.
Mass and Volume Contribution to Twentieth-century Global Sea Level Rise L. Miller & B. C. Douglas Nature vol. 428, 2004.
Cryospheric and Hydrologic Contributions to Global Sea Level Change M. Tamisiea Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory R. Steven Nerem University of Colorado.
Recent results from GRACE in Greenland and Antarctica Isabella Velicogna* and John Wahr** * ESS, University of California Irvine, Irvine CA ** Dept Of.
1 Sea-Level changes. 2 Learning Objectives The shape of the planet: difference between Geoid and Ellipsoid The concept of Mean Sea Level Article:
Gary Lagerloef, PhD Science on Tap, 7 April Apollo 17 December 1972 Climate Science in the Space Age Gary Lagerloef Oceanographer & Climate Scientist.
Global Sea Level Rise Laury Miller NOAA Lab for Satellite Altimetry.
Hydrologic Cycle/Water Balances. Earth’s Water Covers approximately 75% of the surface Volcanic emissions Only known substance that naturally exists as.
Monitoring the Global Sea Level Rise Budget with Jason, Argo and GRACE Observations Eric Leuliette and Laury Miller NOAA/Laboratory for Satellite Altimetry.
Review High Resolution Modeling of Steric Sea-level Rise Tatsuo Suzuki (FRCGC,JAMSTEC) Understanding Sea-level Rise and Variability 6-9 June, 2006 Paris,
Current Climate Change: II - Sea Level Changes Thermal, melt water, salinity, geoid changes and relation to global temperatures.
Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1
1 Refined European sea level estimations by combining altimetry, tide gauges, hydrographic and other data sets with improved regional GIA modeling and.
Don P. Chambers Center for Space Research The University of Texas at Austin Understanding Sea-Level Rise and Variability 6-9 June, 2006 Paris, France The.
Sea Level Rise 2006 Model Results of change in Land Water Storage and Effects on Sea-Level Katia Laval Université Pierre et Marie Curie. Paris LMD/IPSL.
3. Climate Change 3.1 Observations 3.2 Theory of Climate Change 3.3 Climate Change Prediction 3.4 The IPCC Process.
J. Famiglietti 1, T. Syed 1, P. Yeh 1,2 and M. Rodell 3 1 Dept. of Earth System Science, University of California,Irvine, USA 2 now at: Institute of Industrial.
The Water Cycle… from clouds to sea.. from sea to clouds…
Jorge Vazquez Universidad del Norte Barranquilla, Columbia, Nov 14, 2012 How satellites have revolutionized our understanding of the Earth.
Helgi Björnsson, Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland Contribution of Icelandic ice caps to sea level rise: trends and.
Using GRACE to estimate changes in land water storage: present limitations and future potential John Wahr, Sean Swenson, Isabella Velicogna University.
Toward closing the globally averaged sea level budget on seasonal to interannual time scales Josh K. Willis Jet Propulsion.
Sea Level Change Measurements: Estimates from Altimeters Understanding Sea Level Rise and Variability June 6-9, 2006 Paris, France R. S. Nerem, University.
Thermosteric Effects on Long-Term Global Sea Level Change Jianli Chen Center for Space Research, University of Texas at Austin, USA
1 20 th century sea-Level change. The Earth’s ice is melting, sea level has increased ~3 inches since 1960 ~1 inch since signs of accelerating melting.
Water Cycle beyond evaporation, condensation, precipitation
Sea-Level Change Driven by Recent Cryospheric and Hydrological Mass Flux Mark Tamisiea Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics James Davis Emma Hill.
Cambiamento attuale: Ghiaccio e mare CLIMATOLOGIA Prof. Carlo Bisci.
Mark Cresswell Impacts: Sea-level Change 69EG6517 – Impacts & Models of Climate Change.
The Sea Level Rise Story Bruno Tremblay McGill University Slide from Steven Nerem – University of Colorado.
©2010 Elsevier, Inc. 1 Chapter 14 Cuffey & Paterson.
Using Global Ocean Models to Project Sea Level Rise Robert Hallberg NOAA / GFDL.
Rising of Sea Level Bekircan İDER. In the world, the sea level has been rising about 1.8 mm/year for the past century.
Water storage variations from time-variable gravity data Andreas Güntner Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Section.
1 Observed physical and bio-geochemical changes in the ocean Nathan Bindoff ACECRC, IASOS, CSIRO MAR University of Tasmania TPAC.
Seasonal Terrestrial Water Storage Change and Global Mean Sea Level Variation Jianli Chen 1 and Clark Wilson 1,2 Center for Space Research, The University.
Radar Altimeter Data Base System (RADS) -- producing a consistent set of climate-grade observations spanning multiple satellite missions Altimeter/Tide.
Aspects of a climate observing system: energy and water Kevin E Trenberth NCAR Kevin E Trenberth NCAR.
18 April 2007 Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis Chapter 5:Observations: Oceanic Climate Change and Sea Level The Working Group I Report of.
An Overview of the Observations of Sea Level Change R. Steven Nerem University of Colorado Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences Colorado Center.
01 March 2007Royal Society Meeting Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis Chapter 5:Observations: Oceanic Climate Change and Sea Level The Working.
EARTH’S CLIMATE PAST and FUTURE SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 17 Climatic Changes Since the 1800s WILLIAM F. RUDDIMAN © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Don Chambers Center for Space Research, The University of Texas at Austin Josh Willis Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology R.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Image: MODIS Land Group, NASA GSFC March 2000 Closing the Global Sea Level.
Don P. Chambers College of Marine Science University of South Florida Measuring Mean Ocean Mass Variability with GRACE NASA Sea Level Workshop, Austin.
Aims- 1. To understand the movement of water within the global hydrological cycle. 2. Explain how a balance is maintained within the cycle. Complete worksheet.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Water and Seawater Salinity.
Lecture 10: Ice on Earth EarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdfEarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdf, p. 8, 27-30; Ch. 2, p. 21; Ch. 10, p I.Sea Ice II.Glacial.
Climate Science and Satellite Altimetry Meeting of the Committee on a Strategy to Mitigate the Impact of Sensor De-scopes and De-manifests on the NPOESS.
Global Warming And the Planetary Water Cycle Ruth Curry Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Ruth Curry Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Global Warming.
WFM 6311: Climate Risk Management © Dr. Akm Saiful IslamDr. Akm Saiful Islam WFM 6311: Climate Change Risk Management Professor A.K.M. Saiful Islam Lecture-1:
What causes sea level to change?
Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1
Global Sea Level Rise Sandra Ashhab & Ram Fishman December 5th 2006.
20th century sea-Level change
Grade 8 Science Unit 1: Water Systems on Earth Chapter 1.
K38c: Current Climate Change– Sea Level Rise
Sea-Level changes.
California Science Project
Presentation transcript:

WOCE and BEYOND WOCE and BEYOND Nov Sea Level Rise: Can we explain what we measure? Anny Cazenave LEGOS-GRGS/CNES Toulouse, France

- STERIC sea level: change in Density - EUSTATIC sea level: change in Ocean Mass Temperature Salinity Water mass exchange with continents and ice caps

mm/year 2.0 mm/year Thermal expansion Glaciers Greenland (present) Antarctica (present) Ice sheets (long term) Permafrost Sedimentary deposits TOTAL OBSERVATIONS Continental waters 20 th Century Sea Level Rise, IPCC, 2001

SUMMARY OF RECENT RESULTS During the 1990s, sea level has been rising by During the 1990s, sea level has been rising by ~ 3 mm/yr evidence for a recent acceleration ??? Steric and eustatic sea level change recognized as highly non uniform overestimate of the 20 th century sea level rise by tide gauges ??? Steric and eustatic sea level change recognized as highly non uniform overestimate of the 20 th century sea level rise by tide gauges ??? New rates for glaciers and ice sheets recent melting New rates for glaciers and ice sheets recent melting Land water mass contribution to sea level rise can now be estimated Land water mass contribution to sea level rise can now be estimated

Observationsof Present-Day Sea Level Rise

Sea Level Rise during the 1990s from from Satellite Altimetry

TOPEX/POSEIDON

SEA LEVEL TRENDS measured by TOPEX/POSEIDON ( ) Trends in mm/year

Satellite Altimetry for Global Mean Sea Level Advantages high-precisionhigh-precision high spatio-temporal resolutionhigh spatio-temporal resolution global coverageglobal coverage absolute measurementsabsolute measurements Drawbacks time series still short (10 years)time series still short (10 years) no coverage of high- latitude oceans (T/P & Jason)no coverage of high- latitude oceans (T/P & Jason)

Sea Level Rise during the 20 th century from from Tide Gauges

WORLDWIDE TIDE GAUGE NETWORK

Tide gauges used by B. Douglas (1997)

SAN FRANCISCO BREST NEW YORK STOCKHOLM

Main processes causing vertical land motions Tectonic deformationsTectonic deformations Seismic activitySeismic activity Volcanic activityVolcanic activity Viscous deformation of the Earth’s mantleViscous deformation of the Earth’s mantle (Post Glacial Rebound) (Post Glacial Rebound) Land subsidence due to sediments compaction, underground water extraction, etc.Land subsidence due to sediments compaction, underground water extraction, etc. Surface loading due to air and water mass redistribution among atmosphere, oceans, continental water reservoirs and ice capsSurface loading due to air and water mass redistribution among atmosphere, oceans, continental water reservoirs and ice caps

Deformation of the Earth’s mantle under ice sheet loading and POST GLACIAL REBOUND

TIDE GAUGE-BASED SEA LEVEL RISE FOR THE 20 th CENTURY Global 1.5 +/- 0.5 mm/yr (IPCC, 2001)1.5 +/- 0.5 mm/yr (IPCC, 2001) / mm/yr (Douglas, 2001;1.71 +/ mm/yr (Douglas, 2001; 27 sites) 27 sites) / mm/yr (Peltier, 2001;1.84 +/ mm/yr (Peltier, 2001; 27 sites) 27 sites) 1.5 +/- 0.4 mm/yr (Tamaseia et al., 2001; 23 sites)1.5 +/- 0.4 mm/yr (Tamaseia et al., 2001; 23 sites)

Tide Gauges for Global Mean Sea Level Advantages historical informationhistorical information (back to 1900) (back to 1900) useful for calibrating onboard altimetry systemsuseful for calibrating onboard altimetry systemsDrawbacks heterogeneous and limited coverageheterogeneous and limited coverage gaps in data recordsgaps in data records land motion contaminationland motion contamination data sensitive to local perturbationsdata sensitive to local perturbations

Sea level change during the last 6000 years 20 th century years present From Lambeck, 2002

CONSTRAINTSFROMASTRONOMICAL/GEOPHYSICAL OBSERVABLES OBSERVABLESCONSTRAINTSFROMASTRONOMICAL/GEOPHYSICAL

Astronomical/Geophysical Observables Non-tidal Earth ’s rotation acceleration or length of day -LOD- deceleration: -0.6 ms/cy for the past 2500 years Non-tidal Earth ’s rotation acceleration or length of day -LOD- deceleration: -0.6 ms/cy for the past 2500 years Secular decrease of the Earth ’s dynamical flattening : -3x /yr for the past 25 years Secular decrease of the Earth ’s dynamical flattening : -3x /yr for the past 25 years Secular movement of the Earth ’s rotation pole: 10 m/cy towards Greenland over the past 100 years Secular movement of the Earth ’s rotation pole: 10 m/cy towards Greenland over the past 100 years

From Wahr and Davis, 2002 Length of Day (LoD)variations for the past 2500 years LoD J2J2J2J year 2000

Secular decrease of the Earth ’s flattening (J 2 ) From Cox and Chao, 2002

From Wahr and Davis, 2002 Length of Day (LoD)variations for the past 2500 years LoD J2J2J2J year 2000

From Sabadini and Vermeersen, 2002 Post Glacial Rebound PGR + present-day melting A A+G observation Secular Decrease of the Earth’s Flattening

Long-wavelength geoid Sketch of the Earth’s interior Viscosity of the Earth’s mantle

Sketch of the Earth’s interior Lower mantle Core Core Uppermantle Viscosity profiles from global circulation models from global circulation models

Secular decreases of Length of Day and Earth’s flattening are not strong constraints on present-day eustatic sea level rise

DO WE UNDERSTAND OBSERVATIONS OFPRESENT-DAY SEA LEVEL RISE?

Sea Level Rise during the 1990s the 1990s

SEA LEVEL TRENDS FOR (mm/yr) Upper map : Observed (Topex/Poseidon) (Topex/Poseidon) Bottom map: Computed (thermal expansion) - Topex/Poseidon ( ) Thermal expansion ( ) From Cabanes et al., mm/yr +27

World ocean temperature data base S. Levitus, C. Stephens, J.I. Antonov & T.P. Boyer NOAA Atlas NESDIS 40, 2000 World ocean temperature data base S. Levitus, C. Stephens, J.I. Antonov & T.P. Boyer NOAA Atlas NESDIS 40, 2000 Global gridded time series of ocean temperature data at different depths: m : yearly means for m : 5-year means for Global gridded time series of ocean temperature data at different depths: m : yearly means for m : 5-year means for

Topex/Poseidon sea level--- Thermal expansion---- Résidual---- From Cabanes et al., 2001

Sea level rise measured by Topex/Poseidon is mainly caused by thermal expansion (warming) of ocean waters

Sea Level Rise during the 20 th century the 20 th century

mm/year 2.0 mm/year Thermal expansion Glaciers Greenland (present) Antarctica (present) Ice sheets (long term) Permafrost Sedimentary deposits TOTAL OBSERVATIONS Continental waters 20 th Century Sea Level Rise, IPCC, 2001

Past Century Sea Level Rise: Sea Level Rise: is the observed 1.5 mm/yr rate too high? OR are climate-related contributionsunderestimated? Past Century Sea Level Rise: Sea Level Rise: is the observed 1.5 mm/yr rate too high? OR are climate-related contributionsunderestimated?

Steric contribution (thermal expansion) to sea level rise for / mm/yr Steric sea level trends Global mean steric sea level From Cabanes et al., 2001

STERIC SEA LEVEL TRENDS ( ) STERIC SEA LEVEL TRENDS ( )

0.5 +/ mm/yr 1.4 +/- 0.1 mm/yr Steric sea level trends map and tide gauge sites used by Douglas (1997) 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr 0.5 +/ mm/yr From Cabanes et al., 2001

SEA LEVEL RISE ( )  Steric average at the 25 tide gauge sites: 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr  Observed by tide gauges (25 sites) : 1.6 +/ mm/yr  Thermal expansion (global mean) : 0.5 +/ mm/yr  Salinity effect (global mean) : / mm/yr SEA LEVEL RISE ( )  Steric average at the 25 tide gauge sites: 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr 1.3 +/- 0.1 mm/yr  Observed by tide gauges (25 sites) : 1.6 +/ mm/yr  Thermal expansion (global mean) : 0.5 +/ mm/yr  Salinity effect (global mean) : / mm/yr

Map of steric sea level trends and GLOSS tide gauge network Steric sea level: - global mean (in blue) -subsampled at GLOSS sites (in red)

The inhomogeneous distribution of historical tide gauges used to estimate the 20 th century sea level rise cannot capture the regional thermosteric variability Tide gauge-based estimates of 20 th century sea level rise too high???

EUSTATIC SEA LEVEL RISE (ocean mass change)

Eustatic contribution from land water storage (change in the global water cycle ) Eustatic contribution from land water storage (change in the global water cycle )

mm/year 2.0 mm/year Thermal expansion Glaciers Greenland (present) Antarctica (present) Ice sheets (long term) Permafrost Sedimentary deposits TOTAL OBSERVATIONS Continental waters 20 th Century Sea Level Rise, IPCC, 2001

Precipitation Evaporation Transpiration Precipitation : Rivers Lakes Oceans Soil Moisture Ground Waters Atmosphere Snow Pack

Water mass balance : dW/dt = P - E - R W: Water stored in soils W: Water stored in soils P : Precipitation E : Evapotranspiration E : Evapotranspiration R: Runoff GLOBAL HYDROLOGICAL MODELS 

THE LAND DYNAMICS (LaD) MODEL P.C.D. Milly and A.B. Shmakin NOAA/university of Princeton J. Hydrometeorology, 2001 GLOBAL MODELING OF LAND WATER AND ENERGY BALANCES 

LaD MODEL Monthly grids of : - Snow depth - Soil moisture - Underground waters (aquifers) for

0.13 mm/yr 0.05 mm/yr 0.18 mm/yr 0.18 mm/yr Soil waters Snow Total

Trends in land water content ( ) drierwetter drier wetter - 3 mm/yr 3 mm/yr - 3 mm/yr 3 mm/yr

Trends in precipitation on land ( ) drierwetter drier wetter

Land water mass contribution to sea level rise over amounts to 0.2 mm/year

EUSTATIC CONTRIBUTION FROM MOUNTAIN GLACIERS AND ICE SHEETS ICE SHEETS EUSTATIC CONTRIBUTION FROM MOUNTAIN GLACIERS AND ICE SHEETS ICE SHEETS

Eustatic contribution from mountain glaciers, ice sheets and land waters MOUNTAIN GLACIERS : < +0.5 mm/yr MOUNTAIN GLACIERS : < +0.5 mm/yr ICE SHEETS : ICE SHEETS : Greenland : mm/yr (Krabill et al., 2000) Greenland : mm/yr (Krabill et al., 2000) Antarctica : / mm/yr (WA) Antarctica : / mm/yr (WA) 0 +/ mm/yr (EA) 0 +/ mm/yr (EA) total = mm/yr total = mm/yr (Rignot and Thomas, 2002) LAND WATER :+0.2 mm/yr (Milly et al., 2002) LAND WATER :+0.2 mm/yr (Milly et al., 2002) TOTAL : ~1 mm/yr

From Dyurgerov and Meier, 2002 Sea level rise due to mountain glaciers

Eustatic contributions from mountain glaciers, ice sheets and land waters MOUNTAIN GLACIERS : < +0.5 mm/yr MOUNTAIN GLACIERS : < +0.5 mm/yr ICE SHEETS : ICE SHEETS : Greenland : mm/yr (Krabill et al., 2000) Greenland : mm/yr (Krabill et al., 2000) Antarctica : / mm/yr (WA) Antarctica : / mm/yr (WA) 0 +/ mm/yr (EA) 0 +/ mm/yr (EA) total = mm/yr total = mm/yr (Rignot and Thomas, 2002) LAND WATER :+0.2 mm/yr (Milly et al., 2002) LAND WATER :+0.2 mm/yr (Milly et al., 2002) TOTAL : ~1 mm/yr

since SEA LEVEL RISE of the 1990s is fully explained by thermal expansion, there is no room for an additional 1 mm/yr eustatic contribution…..

mm/year 2.0 mm/year Thermal expansion Glaciers Greenland (present) Antarctica (present) Ice sheets (long term) Permafrost Sedimentary deposits TOTAL OBSERVATIONS Continental waters 20 th Century Sea Level Rise, IPCC, 2001

ACCELERATION OF SEA LEVEL RISE IN THE LAST 1-2 DECADES ???

STERIC SEA LEVEL OBSERVED BY TOPEX/POSEIDON

GLOBAL OCEAN - STERIC SEA LEVEL- EOF mode 1 (0-500 m ) m

ATLANTIC OCEAN - STERIC SEA LEVEL-EOF mode m m

TOPEX/POSEIDON SEA LEVEL EOF mode

From Dyurgerov and Meier, 2002 Sea level rise due to mountain glaciers c hange in rate?

PERSPECTIVES

JASON-1

Global mean sea level from Topex/Poseidon and Jason-1 Global mean sea level from Topex/Poseidon and Jason-1 Jason-1

GRACE satellites launched on March 17, 2002

TEMPORAL CHANGE OF THE GRAVITY FIELD

GRACE MISSION: GRACE MISSION: Spatio-temporal gravity variations Resolution : 2°x2° Precision : 0.5 cm (water height) Time scale : 1 month to several years GRACE MISSION: GRACE MISSION: Spatio-temporal gravity variations Resolution : 2°x2° Precision : 0.5 cm (water height) Time scale : 1 month to several years

Precipitation Evaporation Transpiration Precipitation : Rivers Lakes Oceans Soil Moisture Ground Waters Atmosphere Snow Pack

Separation of thermal and mass contributions and mass contributions Sea level rise GRACE (land) Land water and ice sheets ice sheets mass balance mass balance Ocean water mass change GRACE (ocean) JASON