Calculating gravitationally self-consistent sea level changes driven by dynamic topography
J Austermann, JX Mitrovica - … to the Monthly Notices of the …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
Geophysical Supplements to the Monthly Notices of the Royal …, 2015•academic.oup.com
We present a generalized formalism for computing gravitationally self-consistent sea level
changes driven by the combined effects of dynamic topography, geoid perturbations due to
mantle convection, ice mass fluctuations and sediment redistribution on a deforming Earth.
Our mathematical treatment conserves mass of the surface (ice plus ocean) load and the
solid Earth. Moreover, it takes precise account of shoreline migration and the associated
ocean loading. The new formalism avoids a variety of approximations adopted in previous …
changes driven by the combined effects of dynamic topography, geoid perturbations due to
mantle convection, ice mass fluctuations and sediment redistribution on a deforming Earth.
Our mathematical treatment conserves mass of the surface (ice plus ocean) load and the
solid Earth. Moreover, it takes precise account of shoreline migration and the associated
ocean loading. The new formalism avoids a variety of approximations adopted in previous …
Abstract
We present a generalized formalism for computing gravitationally self-consistent sea level changes driven by the combined effects of dynamic topography, geoid perturbations due to mantle convection, ice mass fluctuations and sediment redistribution on a deforming Earth. Our mathematical treatment conserves mass of the surface (ice plus ocean) load and the solid Earth. Moreover, it takes precise account of shoreline migration and the associated ocean loading. The new formalism avoids a variety of approximations adopted in previous models of sea level change driven by dynamic topography, including the assumption that a spatially fixed isostatic amplification of ‘air-loaded’ dynamic topography accurately accounts for ocean loading effects. While our approach is valid for Earth models of arbitrary complexity, we present numerical results for a set of simple cases in which a pattern of dynamic topography is imposed, the response to surface mass loading assumes that Earth structure varies only with depth and that isostatic equilibrium is maintained at all times. These calculations, involving fluid Love number theory, indicate that the largest errors in previous predictions of sea level change driven by dynamic topography occur in regions of shoreline migration, and thus in the vicinity of most geological markers of ancient sea level. We conclude that a gravitationally self-consistent treatment of long-term sea level change is necessary in any effort to use such geological markers to estimate ancient ice volumes.
Oxford University Press
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