Timing and magnitude of recent accelerated sea-level rise (North Carolina, United States)

TitleTiming and magnitude of recent accelerated sea-level rise (North Carolina, United States)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsKemp, AC, Horton, BP, Culver, SJ, Corbett, DR, van de Plassche, O, Gehrels, WR, Douglas, BC, Parnell, AC
JournalGeology
Volume37
Issue11
Pagination1035-1038
ISSN0091-7613
Abstract

We provide records of relative sea level since A. D. 1500 from two salt marshes in North Carolina to complement existing tide-gauge records and to determine when recent rates of accelerated sea-level rise commenced. Reconstructions were developed using foraminifera-based transfer functions and composite chronologies, which were validated against regional twentieth century tide-gauge records. The measured rate of relative sea-level rise in North Carolina during the twentieth century was 3.0-3.3 mm/a, consisting of a background rate of similar to 1 mm/a, plus an abrupt increase of 2.2 mm/a, which began between A. D. 1879 and 1915. This acceleration is broadly synchronous with other studies from the Atlantic coast. The magnitude of the acceleration at both sites is larger than at sites farther north along the U. S. and Canadian Atlantic coast and may be indicative of a latitudinal trend.

DOI10.1130/G30352a.1