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Sea-Level-Rise Trends off the Indian Coasts during the last Two Decades


Affiliations
1 CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
2 LOCEAN Laboratory, Sorbonne Universités (UPMC, Univ Paris 06), CNRS–IRD–MNHN, IPSL, Paris, France
 

The present communication discusses sea-level-rise trends in the north Indian Ocean, particularly off the Indian coasts, based on estimates derived from satellite altimeter and tide-gauge data. Altimeter data analysis over the 1993-2012 period reveals that the rate of sea-level rise is rather spatially homogeneous over most of the north Indian Ocean, reaching values close to global mean sea-level-rise trend (3.2 mm yr-1) estimated over the same period. The only notable exception lies in the northern and eastern coasts of the Bay of Bengal, which experience larger trends (5 mm yr-1 and more). These recent trends derived from altimeter data are higher than those estimated from tide-gauge records over longer periods during the 20th century. This communication calls for an improved understanding of the mechanisms behind this accelerated sea-level-rise recorded over the past two decades, that could either be a direct response to global warming or a result from an aliasing by the natural variability.

Keywords

Global Warming, Natural Variability, Sea-Level-Rise Trend, Satellite Altimetry, Tide-Gauges.
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  • Sea-Level-Rise Trends off the Indian Coasts during the last Two Decades

Abstract Views: 229  |  PDF Views: 76

Authors

A. S. Unnikrishnan
CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
A. G. Nidheesh
CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
M. Lengaigne
LOCEAN Laboratory, Sorbonne Universités (UPMC, Univ Paris 06), CNRS–IRD–MNHN, IPSL, Paris, France

Abstract


The present communication discusses sea-level-rise trends in the north Indian Ocean, particularly off the Indian coasts, based on estimates derived from satellite altimeter and tide-gauge data. Altimeter data analysis over the 1993-2012 period reveals that the rate of sea-level rise is rather spatially homogeneous over most of the north Indian Ocean, reaching values close to global mean sea-level-rise trend (3.2 mm yr-1) estimated over the same period. The only notable exception lies in the northern and eastern coasts of the Bay of Bengal, which experience larger trends (5 mm yr-1 and more). These recent trends derived from altimeter data are higher than those estimated from tide-gauge records over longer periods during the 20th century. This communication calls for an improved understanding of the mechanisms behind this accelerated sea-level-rise recorded over the past two decades, that could either be a direct response to global warming or a result from an aliasing by the natural variability.

Keywords


Global Warming, Natural Variability, Sea-Level-Rise Trend, Satellite Altimetry, Tide-Gauges.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv108%2Fi5%2F966-971