Sea Levels at Newlyn 1915–2005: Analysis of Trends for Future Flooding Risks
- 1 July 2008
- journal article
- Published by Coastal Education and Research Foundation in Journal of Coastal Research
- Vol. 4, 203-212
- https://doi.org/10.2112/06-0785.1
Abstract
It is sometimes assumed that changes in risks of coastal flooding can be computed by just adding mean sea level changes to existing statistics of tidal and meteorological effects. This assumption can be examined by looking at trends in separate tidal and nontidal sea levels, but suitable sites with long records of good quality sea level measurements are rare. As an example, hourly sea level data from the well-maintained tide gauge at Newlyn in southwest England has been critically edited for errors and separated into tidal, nontidal, and mean sea level components. These components have then been analysed for significant trends, and possible correlations with meteorological indicators. There is a small (0.16 mm y(-1)) increase in standard deviation of the observations, and consistent increases in the M-2 and M-4 tidal amplitudes. An apparent reduction in the standard deviation of the nontidal residuals can be attributed to a change to a different measuring system in 1984, as can a sudden decrease of 2 degrees (4 min earlier) in the phase lag of M-2 There are weak correlations between nontidal (surge) statistics and meteorological parameters, including the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO). Observed annual maximum sea levels are increasing at a rate not significantly different from the observed increase in mean sea level of 1.77 +/- 0.12 mm y(-1). These very exact analyses of a high-quality consistent long sea level series may indicate limits on the types of trends to be expected elsewhere in the region. Application of this type of analysis for estimating future flooding risks is discusseKeywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in the occurrence of storm surges around the United Kingdom under a future climate scenario using a dynamic storm surge model driven by the Hadley Centre climate modelsClimate Dynamics, 2001
- Extension to the North Atlantic oscillation using early instrumental pressure observations from Gibraltar and south-west IcelandInternational Journal of Climatology, 1997
- DECADAL VARIATIONS IN CLIMATE ASSOCIATED WITH THE NORTH ATLANTIC OSCILLATIONClimatic Change, 1997
- The subtidal behaviour of the Celtic Sea—I. Sea level and bottom pressuresContinental Shelf Research, 1986
- Temporal variations of tides on the west coast of Great BritainGeophysical Journal International, 1985
- Signal Versus Noise in the Southern OscillationMonthly Weather Review, 1984
- On the smoothing of climatological time series, with application to sea-level at NewlynGeophysical Journal International, 1983
- On perturbations of harmonic constants in the Thames EstuaryGeophysical Journal International, 1983
- Tidal spectroscopy and predictionPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1966
- Meteorological Perturbations of Sea-Level and Tides.Geophysical Journal International, 1924