The latest scientific prediction is for sea levels to rise between 90 and 150 centimetres by 2100, depending on our success in minimising our greenhouse gas emissions.
The latest scientific estimate is that sea levels will rise by between 90 centimetres and 150 centimetres over the present century, depending on progress made in limiting the production of carbon dioxide by human activities.
The rise of the sea level will make people living in sea level countries submerged in sea water.
The InterGovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)'s 4th Assessment Report (2007) projects that we will probably reach 4°C warming above pre-industrial age levels by 2100. We will pass the 'danger limit' of 2°C warming by 2050.Sea levels are also predicted to rise at an accelerated rate. Observed sea levels are actually tracking at the upper range of the IPCC projections of 3 mm per year. When accelerating ice loss from Greenland and Antarctica are factored in to the projections, the estimated sea level rise by 2100 is between 75 cm to 2 meters.Answer (pessimistic)Within the next 100 years a significant portion of ice near the Arctic Circle will melt, particularly Greenland Ice, contributing to seal level rise eventually reaching as high as 20 feet. This means that many coastal areas will flood.The US National Research Council estimates sea level rise will only be 2 to 7 feet by 2100, implying most of the Greenland ice will not have melted by the end of this century. Most scientists are convinced the data is sufficiently robust to conclude the present warming trend will continue or accelerate without substantial modifications in human practices and behavior.The IPCC notes that the 3.3 mm/year measured rate of sea level rise is much faster than originally predicted.
I came up with 692 yards would the sea level rise.
The rise and fall is the tides.
no effect
There are many different predictions about sea level rise, but the most likely sea level rise by 2100 is between 80cm and 1 metre (2.5 to 3 feet).
The latest scientific estimate is that sea levels will rise by between 90 centimetres and 150 centimetres over the present century, depending on progress made in limiting the production of carbon dioxide by human activities.
Sea levels rise with the tides.
The rise of the sea level will make people living in sea level countries submerged in sea water.
A rise in sea levels will not affect the thundering.
yes a plateau can rise above sea level .
The warming climate is leading to rapid melting of glacial ice which is leading to sea level rise of around an inch per decade. This rate is expected to increase as ice melt accelerates and ice breaks off from shelves and enters the water. Some experts predict the sea levels to rise by 2-3 feet by 2100.
The InterGovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)'s 4th Assessment Report (2007) projects that we will probably reach 4°C warming above pre-industrial age levels by 2100. We will pass the 'danger limit' of 2°C warming by 2050.Sea levels are also predicted to rise at an accelerated rate. Observed sea levels are actually tracking at the upper range of the IPCC projections of 3 mm per year. When accelerating ice loss from Greenland and Antarctica are factored in to the projections, the estimated sea level rise by 2100 is between 75 cm to 2 meters.Answer (pessimistic)Within the next 100 years a significant portion of ice near the Arctic Circle will melt, particularly Greenland Ice, contributing to seal level rise eventually reaching as high as 20 feet. This means that many coastal areas will flood.The US National Research Council estimates sea level rise will only be 2 to 7 feet by 2100, implying most of the Greenland ice will not have melted by the end of this century. Most scientists are convinced the data is sufficiently robust to conclude the present warming trend will continue or accelerate without substantial modifications in human practices and behavior.The IPCC notes that the 3.3 mm/year measured rate of sea level rise is much faster than originally predicted.
61 Meters high -- This will not occur, nor is anything close to this being predicted by anyone. But at the current rate and accounting for the acceleration which is clearly measured currently, a rise of over a meter by 2100 is very reasonable and may be conservative.
No. While sea level is expected to rise, it will not flood the entire planet. There is not enough water on Earth to do so. Even if all the ice in the world were to melt, which is not a realistic possibility, sea level would only rise by about 230 feet. Such a rise would cover low-lying places, but most of the land area on Earth would remain high and dry. The worst-case scenario projections suggest a sea-level rise of 4 to 7 feet by the year 2100.
No reasonable climate scientist predicted there would be a 1.5 meter rise within the past 30 years. Ocean levels have risen only 20 cm in the past century, and the IPCC projections do not exceed 60 cm for the next century. These projections are considered to be fairly conservative by many groups. The US NRC projects a 0.5 to 2 meter rise by 2100. Even the IPCC projects eventual sea level rise of 4 to 6 meters in the ensuing centuries, however.