Global coastal sea levels are on average 1 foot higher than previously assumed, a new report finds, raising alarms the world ...
Scientists Have Been Getting Sea Level Heights Wrong, New Study Says Up to 132 Million More People Are at Risk ...
Sea level along the world’s coastlines is often much higher than previously assumed, a new study finds.
A new study in the journal Nature says most sea level rise research may have underestimated coastal water heights by an average of 1 foot.
Measurements of coastal sea-level height around the world may be higher than scientists previously thought, according to new ...
After analyzing 385 studies related to coastal areas and sea level rise, scientists found a significant discrepancy between geoid measurements and actual sea levels, especially in the global south.
Sea-level rise changes coastlines, putting homes at risk, as Summer Haven, Fla., has seen. Aerial Views/E+/Getty Images Shaina Sadai, Five College Consortium and Ambarish Karmalkar, University of ...
New Jersey is likely to see between 2.2 and 3.8 feet of sea-level rise by 2100 if the current level of global carbon emissions continue, but seas could rise by as much as 4.5 feet if ice-sheet melt ...
Sea level rise — mostly due to glacial melt largely caused by anthropogenic climate change — has been a hot button topic for the past half century. But historically defining the basic parameters of ...
It’s undeniable: The sea is rising. Property and infrastructure near and on the shoreline will be at risk of flooding. In Marin, that means San Rafael’s Canal neighborhood, Marin City and low-lying ...