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Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California at
San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093
Edited by James E. Hansen, Goddard Institute for Space Studies,
New York, NY, and approved March 12, 2002 (received for review December
27, 2001)
Changes in sea level (relative to the moving crust) are
associated with changes in ocean volume (mostly thermal expansion) and
in ocean mass (melting and continental storage):
From the Cover
Geophysics
Twentieth century sea level: An enigma
(t) =
steric(t) +
eustatic(t). Recent compilations of global
ocean temperatures by Levitus and coworkers are in accord with
coupled ocean/atmosphere modeling of greenhouse warming; they
yield an increase in 20th century ocean heat content by 2 × 1023 J (compared to 0.1 × 1023
J of atmospheric storage), which corresponds to
greenhouse(2000) = 3 cm. The greenhouse-related
rate is accelerating, with a present value

6 cm/century. Tide records going back to the 19th century show no
measurable acceleration throughout the late 19th and first half of the
20th century; we take 
*
E-mail: wmunk{at}ucsd.edu.
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.092704599
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