The Sea Levels Are Rising

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SEA LEVEL RISE
1. Definition:
1.1 Sea level:
- Is the level of the ocean's surface, especially the level halfway between mean high and low tide
- Be used as a standard in reckoning land elevation or sea depths.

1.2 Sea level rises:
- Happens when the mean high tide level increases year after year
2. Reasons:
Sea levels are rising today not only because of thermal expansion but also melting of glaciers and polar ice caps.
2.1Thermal expansion
As seawater becomes warmer it expands. Heat in the upper layer of the ocean is released quickly into the atmosphere. However, heat absorbed by the deeper layers of the ocean will take much longer to be released and therefore, be stored in the ocean much longer and have significant impacts on future ocean warming.

2.2 Melting of glaciers and polar ice caps:
Large ice formations, like glaciers and the polar ice caps, naturally melt back a bit each summer. But in the winter, snows, made primarily from evaporated seawater, are generally sufficient to balance out the melting. Recently, though, persistently higher temperatures caused by global warming have led to greater-than-average summer melting as well as diminished snowfall due to later winters and earlier springs. This imbalance results in a significant net gain in runoff versus evaporation for the ocean, causing sea levels to rise.

2.3 Ice loss from Greenland and West Antarctica:
As with glaciers and the ice caps, increased heat is causing the massive ice sheets that cover Greenland and Antarctica melt at an accelerated pace.
- The ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica which fully melted would raise sea level by 64m.
- With Greenland, loss of between 50 and 100 billion tons of ice has taken place annually over the period 1993-2003 with...

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...s needing to be constructed.
5. Solutions
- High levees system for each country affected by sea level rising.
- Floating homes — yes, what used to be called houseboats —a re popular as ever, and other flood-prone countries are trying their own hands at water-top homes.
- Burn fewer fossil fuels.
A new study by the Scripps Institution for Oceanography, NCAR, and Climate Central, says curbing emissions of certain pollutants can help prevent the sea level rise.
- Reducing emissions of four specific pollutants—methane, tropospheric ozone, hydrofluorocarbons and black carbon—we could possibly prevent the rate of sea level rise by approximately 25 to 50 percent.
- Less fracking, cutting back on motor vehicle exhaust, industrial emissions and chemical solvents, including windshield washer fluid, creating fewer CFCs and cutting back on anything that creates smoke or soot

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