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Space Geodesy Group

This document summarizes the hazards of sea level rise, including its causes and impacts. It notes that sea level is rising globally at a rate of approximately 2 mm/yr due to natural and human factors. While a small change, rising seas can have devastating effects through inundation, increased flooding, saltwater intrusion, and beach erosion as it removes protective barriers. These effects are exacerbated in areas experiencing land subsidence. The document outlines five major impacts of sea level rise identified by the IPCC: beach erosion, inundation of land, increased flood and storm damage, increased salinity of estuaries and aquifers, and other ecological impacts. Education is key to helping coastal communities minimize risks and adapt to

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views3 pages

Space Geodesy Group

This document summarizes the hazards of sea level rise, including its causes and impacts. It notes that sea level is rising globally at a rate of approximately 2 mm/yr due to natural and human factors. While a small change, rising seas can have devastating effects through inundation, increased flooding, saltwater intrusion, and beach erosion as it removes protective barriers. These effects are exacerbated in areas experiencing land subsidence. The document outlines five major impacts of sea level rise identified by the IPCC: beach erosion, inundation of land, increased flood and storm damage, increased salinity of estuaries and aquifers, and other ecological impacts. Education is key to helping coastal communities minimize risks and adapt to

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dominique
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Sea Level Home

Hazards of Sea Level Rise: An Introduction


by Stacy Archfield

Sea level is rising worldwide and is caused by both natural and human factors. Most research indicates
that sea level is rising approximately 2mm/yr. Although 2 mm/yr. seems to be a relatively small
amount of change, a small increase in sea level can have devastating effects. Other factors such as
glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) are causing coastal lands to sink, increasing the rate of sea level rise
for those areas. Fortunately, in some areas of the world, GIA is causing land to rise allowing for some
compensation to rising sea level. Since greater than 75 percent of the human population will live
within 60 km of a coast by 2000 [Michener et al., 1997], it is important that the effects of any change
in sea level rise are studied. There is no physical capacity that humans have to protect against long
term sea level rise. The key to coping with sea level rise is education of the effects and accurate
assessments of hazards for given points in time. In this way, humans can act decisively and
appropriately to minimize loss of life, and economic and ecological impacts. Education is the only
long-term, far-reaching solution to sea level rise.

Sea level has fluctuated by an order of 100 meters over the last 18,000 years [Michener et al., 1997].
Global sea level can change due to three factors: 1-Change in the volume of the ocean basins, 2-
Expansion or shrinking of ocean water due to changes in climate and 3-Periods of worldwide glacial
advance and retreat [Davis, 1997]. Human impact has no control over changing the volume of the
ocean basins. However, the greenhouse effect can cause the ocean to gather thermal inertia that will
heat the continents and slowly melt the polar ice caps, increasing sea level worldwide [Michener et al.,
1997].

The effects of sea level rise will be spatially non-uniform since GIA will cause some areas to uplift and
others to subside [Gornitz, 1991]. Furthermore, the characteristics of a given coastline are controlled
by many different variables, including interactions between lithology, geomorphology, wave climate,
currents and storm frequencies [Gornitz, 1991]. Gornitz defines the following terms to be used in
talking about coastal hazard assessments:

Coastal hazard — natural phenomenon that exposes the littoral zone to risk of damage or other adverse
effects
Coastal vulnerability — liability of a shore to respond adversely to a hazard
Impact — negative consequences arising from assumed risk to sea level rise

Gornitz also states "sea level rise is a global-scale, long-term hazard, which may, in the long run,
inflict greater damage [to a coastline] than that of a hurricane. Eustatic sea level rise over the next
century will be the sum of the individual contributors from thermal expansion of sea water and ice
melting from alpine glaciers and the polar ice sheets."

In 1990, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change outlined five major impacts of rising sea
level on coastal communities[IPCC, 1998]. Examining these five impacts is the focus of this website.

Beach erosion
The IPCC reports that 1 cm rise in sea level erodes beaches about 1 m horizontally. This becomes a
large issue for developed beaches that are less than 5 m from the ocean [IPCC, 1998]. In addition,
rising sea level would create larger storm surges that would quicken the rate of beach erosion; an
intense storm can erode enough shore to change its entire profile in one year [Dubois, 1990]. Duboisí's
research has shown that observed values of beach erosion were two to three times greater than the
erosion predicted for that year. Dubois suggests that Bruuní's theory and rising sea level may the
primary force responsible for observed erosional rates [Dubois, 1990]. Bruun's rule states that a typical
concave-upward beach profile erodes sand from the beachface and deposits it offshore to maintain
constant water depth [Dubois, 1990]. Bruuní's rule can be applied to correlate sea level rise with
eroding beaches. With present rates of sea level rise, 70% of the worldí's sandy beaches are eroding
and retreating. If the rate of sea level rise continues to increase, the loss of beach to coastal erosion will
increase.

Inundation of land
A 50-cm rise in sea level will inundate 8500 to 19000 km2 of dry land [IPCC, 1998]. In the US, the
lowest forests and farms are in the mid-Atlantic region and the Southeast. Large port cities such as
Boston, New York City, Charleston, Miami and New Orleans are located in lowland areas [IPCC,
1998].

There are two types of inundation that will be caused by sea level rise: 1-permanent inundation and 2-
episodic inundation. The effect that permanent inundation will have on areas is dependent on the local
gradient [Gornitz, 1991]. Areas that have low gradients at a coast are beach ridges, chenier plains,
deltas, mudflats, estuaries, lagoons, and bays [Gornitz, 1991]. Episodic inundation is a result of storm
surges [Gornitz, 1991]. As sea level rises, episodic inundation will be more frequent for these low-
lying areas.

Increased Flood and Storm Damage


A higher sea level will provide a higher base for storm surges [IPCC, 1998]. A one-meter rise in sea
level would enable a 15-year storm to flood areas that today are only flooded by 100-year storms
[IPCC, 1998]. Flood damages would increase 36-58% for a 30-cm rise in sea level and increase 102-
200% for sea level rise greater than 90 cm [IPCC, 1998]. Larger storms cause loss of beach width and
force large sediments into inlets.

Increased salinity of estuaries and aquifers


Rising sea level would allow saltwater to penetrate farther inland and upstream [IPCC, 1998]. Higher
salinity impairs both surface and groundwater supplies [IPCC, 1998]. This effect would impair water
supplies, ecosystems, and coastal farmland [IPCC, 1998]. Saltwater intrusion would also harm aquatic
plants and animals as well as threaten human water supply [IPCC, 1998]. Salinity intrusion has already
been cited as the primary reason oyster harvests have been reduced in the Delaware and Chesapeake
Bays [IPCC, 1998]. In Louisiana, cypress swamps are becoming open lakes due to increasing salinity
[IPCC, 1998]. In humid equatorial climates, gradual sea level rise would cause a brackish-water zone
to migrate inland [Gornitz, 1991].

The penetration of saltwater can be compared to what occurs during extreme droughts when river
runoff is diminished, forcing a fallow period in agriculture [Gornitz, 1991]. As sea level rises, the tidal
saltwater zone penetrates further upstream [Gornitz, 1991]. The zone then becomes unfit for tidal
harvests such as swamp rice [Gornitz, 1991]. Salinity has also been found to decrease seed germination
in a variety of wetland species and higher salinities may decrease recruitment of seed bank species
[Balwin et al., 1996].

In addition to damage to ecosystems, sea level rise promotes saltwater intrusion into coastal aquifers
[Gornitz, 1991]. A freshwater lens overlies saltwater along barrier coasts, and volcanic and coral
islands [Gornitz, 1991]. This freshwater lens is 40 times thicker than the elevation of the water table
above mean sea level [Gornitz, 1991]. Therefore each increment of sea level rise reduces the
freshwater capacity of the lens by 40 times [Gornitz, 1991]. On low coral atolls, less permeable
Holocene sediments overlie a highly permeable Pleistocene karstic subsurface through which seawater
can infiltrate [Gornitz, 1991]. Coastal communities will be forced to find alternative sources of
freshwater.

Other impacts
Although the IPCC lists five impacts as the main consequences of sea level rise there are many others.
Sea level rise has a profound effect on the rate of sedimentation for different parts of the coastal
gradient [Olff et al., 1997]. Peak rates of sedimentation occur at higher elevations on the march and
less sedimentation occurs on the lower elevations [Olff et al., 1997]. Varying of sedimentation rates
will result in changing vegetation zonation and succession on marshes [Olff et al., 1997]. In addition,
storm surges would force large quantities of shoreface sediments through inlets and create tidal deltas
on which barriers would later transgress [Dubois, 1990].

There are many places to find research on specific, but individual impacts of sea level rise. However,
there are some sources that incorporate these variables into a comprehensive picture of the effects of
sea level rise. Coastal communities are affected by many variables and only a handful of the most
important variables have been fully realized in their relation to sea level rise. As more research is done
and the knowledge base is expanded and incorporated into existing research, more accurate
assessments about the impacts and hazards of sea level change can be made.

References
1 Baldwin, A. H., K. L. McKee, I. A. Mendelssohn, The influence of vegetation, salinity, and
inundation on seed banks of oligohaline coastal marshes, American Journal of Botany, 83, 4,
470mdash;479, 1996.
2 Davis, R. A. Jr. The Evolving Coast. Scientific American Library: New York, 1997.
3 Dubois, R. N., Barrier beach erosion and rising sea level, Geology, 18, 1150-1152, 1990.
4 Gornitz, V., Global coastal hazards from future sea level rise, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology,
Palaeoecology (Global and Planetary Change Section), 89, 379-398, 1991.
5 Michener, W. K., E. R. Blood, K. L. Bildstein, M. M. Brinson, and L.R. Gardner, Climate change,
hurricanes and tropical storms, and rising sea level in coastal wetlands, Ecological Applications, 7,
3, 770mdash;801, 1997.
6 Olff, H., J. De Leeuw, J. P. Bakker, R. J. Platerink, H. J. Van Wijnens, and W. De Munck,
Vegetation succession and herbivory in a salt marsh: changes induced by sea level rise and silt
deposition along an elevational gradient, Journal of Ecology, 85, 799-814, 1997.
7 Regional Impacts of Climate Change (IPCC)mdash;North America, 1998, Available:
[Online][1999, January 27]

http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/space_geodesy/SEALEVEL/

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