Yes, according to my professor:
"The sea-floor subsides as it cools, the amount depending on the time the lithosphere has had to cool and thicken. This means that the volume of the ocean basins increases with the mean age of the ocean floor, and that sea level tends to decrease in consequence with the mean age of the ocean floor (because the same amount of sea water sits lower relative to continents). When sea floor production speeds up, as when the midocean ridge system lengthens during a supercontinent's breakup, sea level tends to rise. When sea floor production slows down, as when the midocean ridge system shortens during a supercontinent's assembly, sea level tends to fall. Thus sea level tends to rise during a supercontinent's breakup.
Plains rise in elevation to about 5,000 feet but begin slightly above
Convectional rainfall is caused when heating on the Earth's surface cause air to rise. The air cools as it rises and condensates into rain.
That's an unusual question as stated. Certainly, the Sun causes the temperature to rise, which, in turn, causes increases in wind velocity and, in some cases, thunderstorms. You might also argue that the sun causes plants to rise, in a manner of speaking.
Volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.
When you increase air pressure the mercury in a barometer will rise. Conversely when air pressure decreases the mercury in a barometer will drop.
it can cause sea level to rise
Global Warming and the melting of ice.
yes
If the ice shelves are on land, then, yes, when they melt, sea levels will rise. If they are floating, then sae levels will not rise.
What would cause my rbi level to rise it is 118
It can do. Winds in the atmosphere cause waves. Also the low pressure in the centre of a depression can cause a elevation in sea level called a storm surge.
No
What is in yeast to cause it to rise
....a decrease of barometric pressure by 1 hPa may cause a ~1 cm rise in sea level.... (1 hPa=1 mb) or (1 hectoPascal=1 millibar)
When things get added to the ocean, sea levels rise. Think of it as having a glass of water and then adding ice cubes to it, the level of the water rises when the cubes are added. On a global scale, if a large piece of ice (such as a glacier) moved off the land it was sitting on and into the water (either as chunks or by melting), it will cause the sea level to rise a little.
Eventually, yes, because it will allow coolant level to leak out and fall to lower level than designed.
Sea levels rise with the tides.