Risk of major sea level rise in Northern Europe
http://www.nbi.ku.dk/english/news/news15/risk-of-major-sea-level-rise-in-northern-europe/[font face=Serif]18 June 2015
[font size=5]Risk of major sea level rise in Northern Europe[/font]
[font size=4]Sea level rise - Global warming leads to the ice sheets on land melting and flowing into the sea, which consequently rises. New calculations by researchers from the Niels Bohr Institute show that the sea level in Northern Europe may rise more than previously thought. There is a significant risk that the seas around Scandinavia, England, the Netherlands and northern Germany will rise by up to about 1½ meters in this century. The results are published in a special issue of the scientific journal Climate Research.[/font]
[font size=3]Sea level rise is a significant threat to the worlds coastal areas, but the threat is not the same everywhere on Earth it depends on many regional factors.
Even though the oceans are rising, they do not rise evenly across the globe. This is partly due to regional changes in the gravitational field and land uplift, explains Aslak Grinsted, associate professor at the Centre for Ice and Climate at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen.
Sea distributed unevenly
He explains that gravity over the surface of the land and sea varies due to differences in the subsurface and surroundings the greater the mass, the greater the gravity. The enormous ice sheet on Greenland attracts the sea, which consequently becomes higher around Greenland. When the ice sheet melts and flows out to sea as water, this attraction is reduced and even though more water has entered the sea, the sea level around Greenland would fall.
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