The battle over sea level in JCR

John Droz writes in with this:

A few months ago a widely-publicized article by Houston and Dean was published in the Journal of Coastal Research (and on your site), noting that although sea-level is rising; the tide gauge data does not show any increased rate of rise (acceleration) for the 20th and early 21st centuries.  This was augmented by a recent paper authored by an Australian scientist as well (<<http://www.jcronline.org/doi/full/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-10-00141.1>>).

In the most recent volume of the Journal of Coastal Research, there is a point/counterpoint on this study. It was started by an attack on this paper by Rahmstorf & Vermeer and followed by a response to this by Houston & Dean (below). 

Discussion of: Houston, J.R. and Dean, R.G., 2011. Sea-Level Acceleration Based on U.S. Tide Gauges and Extensions of Previous Global-Gauge Analyses. Journal of Coastal Research, 27(3), 409–417

Stefan Rahmstorf† and Martin Vermeer‡ <<http://www.jcronline.org/doi/full/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-11-00082.1>>

Here’s the rebuttal:

Reply to: Rahmstorf, S. and Vermeer, M., 2011. Discussion of: Houston, J.R. and Dean, R.G., 2011. Sea-Level Acceleration Based on U.S. Tide Gauges and Extensions of Previous Global-Gauge Analyses. Journal of Coastal Research, 27(3), 409–417

J. R. Houston† and R. G. Dean‡ <<http://www.jcronline.org/doi/full/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-11A-00008.1>>

Rahmstorf and Vermeer (RV) argue that modeling sea level as a function of temperature using their semi-empirical approach as presented by Rahmstorf (2007) and Vermeer and Rahmstorf (2009) is superior to the standard approach of analyzing sea-level rise as a function of time used by Houston and Dean (2011). Their criticism applies not only to this paper, but also to the work of eminent sea-level experts such as Douglas, Holgate, Woodworth, and others who have used the same standard approach we use. In making this claim, RV present their Figure 1 as the key evidence supporting the efficacy of their model. Figure 1 purports to show good agreement between accelerations based on their modeling and accelerations based on the data of Church and White (2006). However, it is easily seen that the portion of Figure 1 where the agreement is “good” compares their modeling versus increasingly meaningless data, and they have been selective in showing only data that appear to match their modeling and not the data that strongly disagree.

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Figure 1

From Comment by Rahmstorf and Vermeer.

 

Houston and Dean (2011) considered only tide-gauge records with lengths greater than 60 years, noting that shorter record lengths are “corrupted” by decadal fluctuations. Douglas (1992) shows that as a result of decadal fluctuations, as record lengths become increasingly shorter than approximately 50–60 years, about half of tide-gauge records display increasingly large positive accelerations, while the other half displays increasingly large negative accelerations. These positive and negative accelerations are uncorrelated to accelerations based on record lengths greater than approximately 50–60 years. Note in Figure 1 that as the record length becomes shorter, the 2-sigma range becomes increasingly large so that for most of the right-hand side of Figure 1 it is not possible to know whether the accelerations are positive or negative, making comparisons increasingly meaningless.

In Figure 1, RV show only the data that agree with their model. On the x axis of Figure 1, record lengths are shorter than 60 years for starting years after around 1940. It happens that at around 1940 the acceleration shown is approximately zero. Thus, as seen in Figure 2, the record from 1940 to 2001 has a strong linear trend with decadal fluctuations but approximately no acceleration. If the record from 1940 to 2001 has zero acceleration, how is it then possible that all shorter records (starting years after 1940) shown in Figure 1 have positive accelerations that increase as record lengths shorten? It is not possible. Again, RV only plot the data as long as they agree with their model. If the plot is extended, e.g., to the starting year of 1985, the acceleration is −0.044 mm/y2, more than twice the range shown for negative accelerations in Figure 1. If the plot is extended further, the folly of analyzing records shorter than approximately 60 years becomes increasingly obvious. The acceleration for a starting year of 1995 is −0.51 mm/y2, about 25 times the range shown for negative accelerations in Figure 1. RV compare their model to data as long as there are positive accelerations and do not continue the plot when accelerations become negative, which must happen for the overall record from 1940 to 2001 to have an acceleration of approximately zero. Their rationale for stopping at a starting time of 1970 is that after 1970 “… short-term noise dominates the calculations and results oscillate strongly” (p. 789). But Douglas (1992) shows, e.g., that 30–40-year record lengths (starting times 1960 and 1970 in Figure 1) show positive and negative accelerations 10–20 times larger than accelerations determined from 80-year records. Yet RV criticize our analysis of 80-year records from 1930 to 2010 as being too short. The fact is that decadal fluctuations begin to dominate records shorter than about 60 years, and accelerations become increasingly meaningless for starting years in Figure 1 greater than about 1940. Moreover, positive accelerations peak some time after the starting time of 1970 and eventually plunge to very large negative values. In summary, RV compare their model results to meaningless data after the starting year of about 1940 and are selective in only showing data with positive accelerations after 1940.

View larger version(22K) 

Figure 2

Church and White (2006) data from 1940–2001.

 

Church et al. (2004) correctly analyze the same data set (their own) that RV incorrectly analyze and conclude that “Decadal variability in sea level is observed but to date there is no detectable secular increase in the rate of sea level rise over the period 1950–2000” (p. 2624). This conclusion is evident from Figure 2 and in stark contrast to the claims of RV and the acceleration they show in Figure 1 for a starting year of 1950.

RV link sea-level rise with temperature using a simple linear relationship with two free variables of opposite signs that allow them to “fit” any smooth data set. However, they are curve fitting, not modeling physics, so the approach cannot be used to predict future sea level. Holgate et al. (2007) criticized RV’s assumption of a linear relationship between global mean surface temperature and the rate of global mean sea-level change and concluded, “We find no such linear relationship” (p. 1866b). Further they concluded, “… at the 50- to 100-year time scale, the linear relationship has little skill in predicting the observations not included in the original model formulation” (p. 1866b). A recent workshop of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2010) considered the semi-empirical approaches of Rahmstorf (2007), Vermeer and Rahmstorf (2009), and others and concluded, “No physically-based information is contained in such models …” (p. 2) and “The physical basis for the large estimates from these semi-empirical models is therefore currently lacking” (p. 2).

RV also present less fundamental criticisms of Houston and Dean (2010). For example, they note that data considered by Houston and Dean are biased to the northern hemisphere. This criticism would apply to any study of sea-level rise and is attributable to the lack of historical tide-gauge data in the southern hemisphere. In fact, it applies to the historical temperature that RV use in their analysis. However, we note that Watson (2011) published an analysis of sea level in Australia and obtained small decelerations very similar to those of our study.

RV argue that impoundment by dams decreased the rate of sea-level rise after around 1960. They say that our paper claims that groundwater mining would offset this impoundment, and they then argue that this mining is relatively small. They neglect to mention that groundwater mining is only one of the offsetting factors given in Houston and Dean. Houston and Dean (2011) state, “However, in the IPCC, Bindoff et al. (2007) note that the reservoir impoundment is largely offset by other anthropogenic activities that accelerated since 1930, such as groundwater extraction, shrinkage of large lakes, wetland loss, and deforestation” (p. 415). Houston and Dean further state that “Huntington (2008) showed ranges of the contribution of each term of the land–water interchange determined in several studies and concluded that the net effect of all the contributions was to increase the sea-level trend” (p. 415). This conclusion is in direct opposition to the claim of RV that impoundment by dams significantly decreased the rate of sea-level rise.

The important conclusion of our study is not that the data sets we analyze display small sea-level decelerations, but that accelerations, whether negative or positive (we reference studies that found small positive accelerations), are quite small. To reach the multimeter levels projected for 2100 by RV requires large positive accelerations that are one to two orders of magnitude greater than those yet observed in sea-level data.

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July 21, 2011 6:13 am

Was there really a big increase in dam construction after 1960? Here in the US, all the big dams were built well before that time, and since then, there has been a movement to decommission and remove dams.

Theo Goodwin
July 21, 2011 6:30 am

“A recent workshop of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2010) considered the semi-empirical approaches of Rahmstorf (2007), Vermeer and Rahmstorf (2009), and others and concluded, “No physically-based information is contained in such models …” (p. 2) and “The physical basis for the large estimates from these semi-empirical models is therefore currently lacking” (p. 2).”
Yes, that is true. Now, the question is whether Vermeer and Rahmstorf can mount a successful revolution in the IPCC. This revolutionary effort will make for fascinating viewing over the next year or two.

NikFromNYC
July 21, 2011 6:31 am

The last digit of Pi walks around.
http://i.min.us/iehYCc.jpg
-=NYC=-

dp
July 21, 2011 6:39 am

Do I understand correctly they are trying to establish water density as a proxy for sea level?

David L. Hagen
July 21, 2011 6:45 am

Climate Sanity posted: >25% of sea-level rise is due to groundwater depletion
citing Wada, Y., L. P.H. van Beek, C. M. van Kempen, J. W.T.M. Reckman, S. Vasak, and M.F.P. Bierkens (2010), Global depletion of groundwater resources, GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 37, L20402, doi:10.1029/2010GL044571, 2010

We estimate that since the 1960s groundwater abstraction has more than doubled (from 312 ± 37 to 734 ± 84 km3 a-1) resulting in an increase in groundwater depletion of from 126 ± 32 to 283 ± 40 km3 a-1. Most of the groundwater released from storage due to groundwater depletion will end up in the ocean, partly by runoff and, as most of the groundwater use is for irrigation purposes, predominantly through evaporation and then precipitation…We estimate the contribution of groundwater depletion to sea level rise to be 0.8 (±0.1) mm a-1, which is 25 (±3) % of the current rate of sea level rise of 3.1 mm a-1… and the same order of magnitude as the contribution from glaciers and ice caps.

stan
July 21, 2011 6:57 am

After “worse than we thought” turned out to have a statistical methodology that was worse than we imagined possible, why does Rahmstorf have any credibility left as a scientist? Is making up pretend numbers the gold standard for climate science?

DirkH
July 21, 2011 7:07 am

Rahmstorf works as sidekick of Schellnhuber at the Potsdam PIK near Berlin; PIK meaning “Potsdam Institut fuer Klimafolgenforschung” or “Institute for Climate Consequences Research”, literally translated. So for them, prognosticating dramatic consequences is the way to go because otherwise their institute would lose importance and funding.
Never expect objectivity from any person at that institute.

Bill Illis
July 21, 2011 7:25 am

This kind of data is always succeptible to data selection (which is why I always get the data myself) and forget these smoothing algorithms which just allows one to see things that are not actually there.
I can use the (unsmoothed) data to show an acceleration in sea level since 1870.
http://img684.imageshack.us/img684/8127/sealevel1870.png
Or I can show a deceleration in sea level since 1926.
(There are actually some unusual step changes in the data which allows one to pick time frames – I’m not sure it is really the best dataset – for example, the large volcanoes should show up clearly since they cool the oceans a little but I don’t see it always showing up properly).
http://img217.imageshack.us/img217/1146/sealevel1926.png
The numbers are about 2.0 mms/year in my mind over the whole timeframe given the unusual changes in the data. There may have been an acceleration in the trend of +0.015 mms/year up to about 1995 but the satellites are now clearly showing a deceleration in the trend of about -0.06 mms/year (and the satellites are in fact into the negatives in the current year).
http://img845.imageshack.us/img845/7734/sealevelchange1870.png

Caleb
July 21, 2011 7:25 am

RE: Robert L says:
July 21, 2011 at 4:59 am
“Aral sea has lost about 1000km³ amounting to about 3mm or about 1 years worth of current sea level rise.”
Thanks for that tidbit of information. Hopefully it is correct, for I will be using it. There is nothing like having a stray fact-bomb or two to drop, during cocktail party discussions about the sea levels rising.
Now I have another question. How much has the water table dropped, world wide? I am always hearing about how much ground water has been pumped out in arid areas, and how this-or-that aquifer will run out in X number of years. If you added up all the pumped-out-water, would you get another 3 mm of sea level rise? Is that another fact-bomb I could use?
Third question, is “factoid” the proper word for a fact-bomb?
I need all the factoids I can get, especially when I get told that the reason the sea level isn’t rising is because it is rising, and the rising causes a isostatic depression of the sea-bottom, so the rising is masking the rising.
Sometimes these discussions leave me a bit cross-eyed. Maybe some day we will be able to sit by the sea, and watch the tide come in, and watch the tide go out, with out quibbling about the width of a hair.
However then I suppose certain people would fuss about whether the seagulls are bad for the terns.

Chris D.
July 21, 2011 7:28 am

Re: What David L. Hagen says:
July 21, 2011 at 6:45 am
Thanks for those links. Being a layman, I really have a poor understanding of this subject. One of the first things I thought of reading the Climate Sanity piece was the issue of fossil water and how much that has contributed (if at all) to sea rise, considering that fossil water hasn’t been in the water cycle for a very long time. Does anyone know if fossil water is considered a subset of ground water? Wada, et. al (2010) talks about ground water recharge, so I get the impression fossil water wasn’t even considered. Thanks.

July 21, 2011 7:38 am

The graphs of sea level rise for the past 10,000 years such as Wikipedia depict sea level rising constantly since the end o the ice age. However based on temperature proxies from Greenland the temperatures have been falling for the last 6000 years but punctuated with warm periods every thousand or so years, such as the current one for the past 100 years. That suggested to me that sea levels must have high-standed 6 thousand years ago, and indeed there are many papers that, after accounting for tectonic changes, show sea level were higher a few thousand years ago. So what is the basis of constructing a misleading depiction of continuous sea level over the past millenia?
from Geomorphic evidence for mid–late Holocene higher sealevel from
southeastern Australia, Switzer 2010 “This beach sequence provides new evidence for a period of higher sea level 1–1.5 m higher than present thatlasted until at least c.2000–2500calBP and adds complementary geomorphic evidence for the mid to late Holocene sea-level highstand previously identified along other parts of the southeast Australian coast using other methods.”
from Impact of Mid-Holocene Hydro-Isostatic Highstand in Regional Sea Level on Habitability of Islands in Pacific Oceania, Dickinson 2003
“Highstand conditions were reached in widely spaced island groups by the interval 4000-3000 BC, and probably peaked near 2000 BC as inferred from global isostatic calculations, but persisted longer within the interior of the Pacific Ocean basin than along its western margin. Post-mid-Holocene sea level began to decline by 1200 BC along fringing island arcs of both the northwest and southwest Pacific, but highstand conditions persisted until AD 800 in the Tuamotu Archipelago”
from: Middle Holocene Sea-Level and Evolution of The Gulf of Mexico Coast (USA) Blum 2002
“New data published in BLUM et al. (2001) suggest that middle Holocene sea level along the Texas Gulf of Mexico coast was at –9 m at ca. 7.8 ka, then rose rapidly to +2 m or more by ca. 6.8 ka.”
In Fagan’s book the Little Ice Age he reports that during the Medieval Warm Period 1000 years ago the North Sea was 40-50 cm higher than today, and storms caused it to breech the coast creating the Zuider Zee.

Hoser
July 21, 2011 7:50 am

No href in your anchor tags for fig 1 and 2 links.

ferd berple
July 21, 2011 8:25 am

Jason Joice M.D. says:
July 21, 2011 at 5:06 am
So they are accusing Rahmstorf and Vermeer of cherry-picking short time frames to get the data they want to show rapid and accelerating sea level rise. Hmmm… sounds familiar.
The selective use of data to paint a false picture used to be called called advertising, propaganda or fraud. In the world of government grants and co2 taxes, it is now called climate science.

Pamela Gray
July 21, 2011 8:26 am

Reading just the snippets of RV’s criticisms contained in the post, I for one am beginning to see tired imitations of biblical prophesy in AGW papers. It won’t be long before a compiled sacred text appears to warn us all that it is worse than we thought. Shades of John, Jona and Jeremiah! Could this be Josh’s next cartoon idea?

TomRude
July 21, 2011 8:46 am

Their reply to RV is quite a delicacy to read: these guys are not impressed and are not afraid to write it.
As an aside, the Globe and Mail in Canada has run at least 5 articles on the heat wave supposed to be gripping the country… that is Toronto and suburbs LOL… They also published a AP write up on Kaufmann et al. 2011 but not on Vernier and of course never on Houston & Dean…

jorgekafkazar
July 21, 2011 8:51 am

Semi-empirical? Is that related to semi-pregnant in any way?

bruce
July 21, 2011 9:09 am

Looks like RV had a seda-give moment with that dam impoundment arguement. Did Mel Brooks co-author that paper?

F. Ross
July 21, 2011 9:13 am

wfrumkin says:
July 21, 2011 at 5:16 am
In physics the rate of change in acceleration is referred to as jerk and it is clear that since Algore has been involved in sea level rise there is a big jerk in the data. 😉

Ahem, …well said. ROTFLOL

ferd berple
July 21, 2011 9:14 am

It is interesting to note this quote in JCR
http://www.jcronline.org/doi/full/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-10-00141.1
“The full range of lunar influences on tides at a given location occurs over a nodal cycle of approximately 18.6 years, during which time the Moon’s declination varies between approximately 18.3° and 28.6°. Throughout this cycle the moon is known to induce a small amplitude harmonic influence on the position of mean sea level at a fixed location”
Thus, any study of sea level on a scale of less than 20 years of so, will show acceleration and deceleration, depending upon location. By selecting only those stations that are showing acceleration, so called “scientists” (RV) have been able to show acceleration on scales less than 20 years.
Big deal. Apparently RV is cherry picking to show the effects of the moon on sea levels, and trying to say it is caused by temperature. It looks like scientific fraud to me.

William McQuiddy
July 21, 2011 9:23 am

Perhaps we should look at the big picture shown by William McClenney, a geologist:
“Since at least the early part of this century Dan Ponti of the United States Geologic Survey has been re-defining the Pleistocene layercake geology of the Los Angeles Basin by coring the Pleistocene sediments in the Wilmington-Long Beach Area (Figure 4). I, and most other
practicing geologists here have been watching his progress with a keen eye. In June of this year he gave a talk about his present findings and he has 16 climate change events defined in the late Pleistocene. Sixteen! Each averaging 120 meters in sea level change. Now that isn’t 400 feet, its 393.69996 feet. Close enough for government work you say? And just so you get the whole
picture, each ice age/interglacial couple lasts about 100,000 years. The interglacials (global warmings) last something like 10-15k years of that 100k. And again, just so the picture gets set firmly in your mind, these dramatic climate shifts are the most punctual things known in the
entire geologic record. You could set your geologic clock by them, all sixteen of them.”
http:icecap.us/images/uploads/McClenneyPart_1.pdf
We appear to be short for this series of several 10s of feet sea level rise.

Chuck Nolan
July 21, 2011 9:52 am

Is it true they are claiming acc/decel accuracy to 0.01 mm/yr.
How do they do that?

Chris D.
July 21, 2011 10:25 am

I appear to have found some of the answers to my question above in this excellent post (note that it predates this WUWT post) by Pielke, Sr:
http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2010/10/18/the-role-of-fossil-water-on-climate-an-important-climate-forcing-whose-influence-has-not-yet-been-properly-assessed/

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
July 21, 2011 10:26 am

Offhand I don’t think this is what the (C)AGW-pushers mean when they say ‘RV’s will cause catastrophic sea level rise’…

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
July 21, 2011 10:41 am

Chuck Nolan said on July 21, 2011 at 9:52 am:

Is it true they are claiming acc/decel accuracy to 0.01 mm/yr.
How do they do that?

Calculate with an accuracy of +/- 1 mm/century, then divide by 100yr/century.
Voila, instant accuracy increase!
(Note: studying the difference between accuracy and precision should prove worthwhile.)

Caleb
July 21, 2011 11:55 am

RE: Chris D. says:
July 21, 2011 at 10:25 am
Thanks for that interesting link.
It seems that, by sucking up all this “fossil water” from under the earth, we have created a situation wherein two possibilities exist, neither of which have been focused on very much by Alarmists.
First, by freeing all this formerly trapped water, we may have added slightly to the water available in the water cycle, which would raise the sea levels slightly.
Second, by making use of all this water, irrigating areas which were formerly dry, we may have increased the amount of water that evaporates, and is in the air. That makes me chuckle, for what is water that is in the air? It is a Greenhouse Gas!
In other words, by feeding so many by irrigating so much, we may have raised the amount of H2O in the atmosphere, and warmed our planet a bit. Wouldn’t it be a laugh if the slight warming we’ve experienced had more to do with irrigation than burning coal?
Of course, some Alarmists would then want to ban irrigation. Yikes. That wipes the smile off my face.

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