Fil:Post-Glacial Sea Level.png

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Fra Wikibooks, den frie samling af lærebøger

Oprindelig fil(1.813 × 1.088 billedpunkter, filstørrelse: 371 KB, MIME-type: image/png)

Denne fil er fra Wikimedia Commons og kan bruges på andre projekter. Indholdet på dens filbeskrivelsesside der, er vist herunder.

Beskrivelse

Expansion of the most recent 9 kyr

This figure shows sea level rise the end of the last glacial episode based on data from Fleming et al. 1998, Fleming 2000, and Milne et al. 2005. These papers collected data from various reports and adjusted them for subsequent vertical geologic motions, primarily those associated with post-glacial continental and hydroisostatic rebound. The first refers to deformations caused by the weight of continental ice sheets pressing down on the land the latter refers to uplift in coastal areas resulting from the increased weight of water associated with rising sea levels. Because of the latter effect and associated uplift, many islands, especially in the Pacific, experienced higher local sea levels in the mid-Holocene than they do today. Uncertainty about the magnitude of these corrections is the dominant uncertainty in many measurements of sea level change.

The black curve is based on minimizing the sum of squares error weighted distance between this curve and the plotted data. It was constructed by adjusting a number of specified tie points, typically placed every 1 kyr but at times adjusted for sparse or rapidly varying data. A small number of extreme outliers were dropped. Some authors propose the existence of significant short-term fluctuations in sea level such that the sea level curve might oscillate up and down about this ~1 kyr mean state. Others dispute this and argue that sea level change has largely been a smooth and gradual process. However, at least one episode of rapid deglaciation, known as meltwater pulse 1A, is agreed upon, and is indicated on the plot. A variety of other accelerated periods of deglaciation have been proposed (i.e. meltwater pulse 1B, 1C, 1D, 2, 3...), but it is unclear whether these actually occurred or merely reflect misinterpretation of difficult measurements. No other events are evident in the data presented above.

The lowest point of sea level during the last glaciation is not well constrained by observations (shown here as a dashed curve), but is generally argued to be approximately 130 ± 10 m below present sea level and to have occurred at approximately 22 ± 3 thousand years ago. The time of lowest sea level is more or less equivalent to the Last Glacial Maximum. Prior to this time, ice sheets were still increasing in size, so sea level had been decreasing almost continuously for approximately 100,000 years.

Copyright

This figure was prepared by Robert A. Rohde from published data, and is incorporated into the Global Warming Art project.

Image from Global Warming Art
This image is an original work created for Global Warming Art. Please refer to the image description page for more information.
GNU head Tilladelse er givet til at kopiere, distribuere og/eller ændre dette dokument under betingelserne i GNU Free Documentation License', Version 1.2 eller enhver senere version udgivet af Free Software Foundation; uden et invariant afsnit, ingen forsidetekster, og ingen bagsidetekst. En kopi af licensen er inkluderet i afsnittet GNU Free Documentation License.
w:da:Creative Commons
kreditering deling på samme vilkår
Denne fil er udgivet under Creative Commons Kreditering-Del på samme vilkår 3.0 Ikke-porteret-licensen
Du må frit:
  • at dele – at kopiere, distribuere og overføre værket
  • at remixe – at tilpasse værket
Under følgende vilkår:
  • kreditering – Du skal give passende kreditering, angive et link til licensen, og oplyse om der er foretaget ændringer. Du må gøre det på enhver fornuftig måde, men ikke på en måde der antyder at licensgiveren godkender dig eller din anvendelse.
  • deling på samme vilkår – Hvis du bearbejder, ændrer eller bygger videre på dette værk, skal du distribuere dine bidrag under den samme eller en kompatibel licens som originalen.
Denne licens blev tilføjet som en del af GFDL-licensopdateringen.


References

  • Fleming, Kevin, Paul Johnston, Dan Zwartz, Yusuke Yokoyama, Kurt Lambeck, and John Chappell (1998). "Refining the eustatic sea-level curve since the Last Glacial Maximum using far- and intermediate-field sites". Earth and Planetary Science Letters 163 (1-4): 327-342. doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(98)00198-8
  • Fleming, Kevin Michael (2000) Glacial Rebound and Sea-level Change Constraints on the Greenland Ice Sheet, Australian National University PhD Thesis
  • Milne, Glenn A., Antony J. Long and Sophie E. Bassett (2005). "Modelling Holocene relative sea-level observations from the Caribbean and South America". Quaternary Science Reviews 24 (10-11): 1183-1202. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.10.005

|

Dette billede (eller alle billederne i denne artikel eller kategori) bør genskabes ved hjælp af vektorgrafik som en SVG-fil. Dette har flere fordele; se Commons:Media for cleanup for mere information. Hvis der eksisterer en SVG-version af dette billede, så vær venlig at lægge den op. Efter en SVG-version er blevet lagt op, så erstat denne skabelon med {{Vector version available|nyt billedes navn.svg}} på denne side.

Captions

Tilføj en kort forklaring på en enkelt linje om hvad filen viser

Elementer som er med i denne fil

afbilder

image/png

Filhistorik

Klik på en dato/tid for at se filen som den så ud på det tidspunkt.

Dato/tidMiniaturebilledeDimensionerBrugerKommentar
nuværende19. mar. 2019, 01:36Miniature af versionen fra 19. mar. 2019, 01:361.813 × 1.088 (371 KB)Dragons flightHigher resolution version
25. nov. 2016, 19:26Miniature af versionen fra 25. nov. 2016, 19:26526 × 359 (19 KB)A876edited to correct spelling. (also OptiPNG.)
27. dec. 2005, 04:20Miniature af versionen fra 27. dec. 2005, 04:20526 × 359 (23 KB)AngrenseSea level variation during the last post-glacial period. Source:English version of Wikipedia.

Den følgende side bruger denne fil:

Global filanvendelse

Følgende andre wikier anvender denne fil:

Vis flere globale anvendelser af denne fil.

Metadata