Glacial Isostatic Adjustment and Contemporary Sea Level Rise: An Overview
详细信息    查看全文
  • 作者:Giorgio Spada
  • 关键词:Sea level rise ; Glacial isostasy ; Global change
  • 刊名:Surveys in Geophysics
  • 出版年:2017
  • 出版时间:January 2017
  • 年:2017
  • 卷:38
  • 期:1
  • 页码:153-185
  • 全文大小:
  • 刊物类别:Earth and Environmental Science
  • 刊物主题:Geophysics/Geodesy; Earth Sciences, general; Astronomy, Observations and Techniques;
  • 出版者:Springer Netherlands
  • ISSN:1573-0956
  • 卷排序:38
文摘
Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) encompasses a suite of geophysical phenomena accompanying the waxing and waning of continental-scale ice sheets. These involve the solid Earth, the oceans and the cryosphere both on short (decade to century) and on long (millennia) timescales. In the framework of contemporary sea-level change, the role of GIA is particular. In fact, among the processes significantly contributing to contemporary sea-level change, GIA is the only one for which deformational, gravitational and rotational effects are simultaneously operating, and for which the rheology of the solid Earth is essential. Here, I review the basic elements of the GIA theory, emphasizing the connections with current sea-level changes observed by tide gauges and altimetry. This purpose is met discussing the nature of the “sea-level equation” (SLE), which represents the basis for modeling the sea-level variations of glacial isostatic origin, also giving access to a full set of geodetic variations associated with GIA. Here, the SLE is employed to characterize the remarkable geographical variability of the GIA-induced sea-level variations, which are often expressed in terms of “fingerprints”. Using harmonic analysis, the spatial variability of the GIA fingerprints is compared to that of other components of contemporary sea-level change. In closing, some attention is devoted to the importance of the “GIA corrections” in the context of modern sea-level observations, based on tide gauges or satellite altimeters.
NGLC 2004-2010.National Geological Library of China All Rights Reserved.
Add:29 Xueyuan Rd,Haidian District,Beijing,PRC. Mail Add: 8324 mailbox 100083
For exchange or info please contact us via email.