Abstract

We present a new 300-year sea-level reconstruction from a salt marsh on the Isle of Wight (central English Channel, UK) that we compare to other salt-marsh and long tide-gauge records to examine spatial and temporal variability in sea-level change in the North Atlantic. Our new reconstruction identifies an overall rise in relative sea level (RSL) of c. 0.30 m since the start of the eighteenth century at a rate of 0.9±0.3 mmyr−1. Error-in-variables changepoint analysis indicates that there is no statistically significant deviation from a constant rate within the dataset. The reconstruction is broadly comparable to other tide-gauge and salt-marsh records from the European Atlantic, demonstrating coherence in sea level in this region over the last 150–300 years. In contrast, we identify significant differences in the rate and timing of RSL with records from the east coast of North America. The absence of a strong late 19th/early 20th century RSL acceleration contrasts with that recorded in salt marsh sediments along the eastern USA coastline, in particular in a well-dated and precise sea-level reconstruction from North Carolina. This suggests that this part of the North Carolina sea level record represents a regionally specific sea level acceleration. This is significant because the North Carolina record has been used as if it were globally representative within semi-empirical parameterisations of past and future sea-level change. We conclude that regional-scale differences of sea-level change highlight the value of using several, regionally representative RSL records when calibrating and testing semi-empirical models of sea level against palaeo-records. This is because by using records that potentially over-estimate sea-level rise in the past such models risk over-estimating sea-level rise in the future.

Highlights

  • Salt-marsh sea-level reconstructions can extend tide-gauge measurements back in time to create multi-century or millennia time series that may be compared with various forcing mechanisms, such as climate, ocean dynamics and ice sheet history

  • We develop a chronology for our samples using Accelerator Mass Spectrometer (AMS) 14C of plant macrofossils, 210Pb, 137Cs, 206Pb/207Pb, pollen markers (Figures S3 and S4) and Spherical Carbonaceous Particles (SCPs) modelled using the Bayesian age-depth BACON function in R (Blaauw and Andres Christen, 2011) (Table 1, Table S1, Figures S1 and S2)

  • Our study suggests that the relative sea level (RSL) records from the northeast and northwest Atlantic differ to that from North Carolina, with regard to the magnitude of the sea-level changes during the late 19th and early 20th century

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Summary

Introduction

Salt-marsh sea-level reconstructions can extend tide-gauge measurements back in time to create multi-century or millennia time series that may be compared with various forcing mechanisms, such as climate, ocean dynamics and ice sheet history. Data archaeology is recovering some new long tide-gauge data (e.g. Haigh et al., 2009; Woodworth, 1999) but this is unlikely to generate multi-century records that are not already known For this reason, salt-marsh archives provide an important source from which longer records can be reconstructed, especially from the northeast Atlantic coastline. The absence of an inflexion in our Isle of Wight record differs from the pronounced inflexion observed in North American salt marsh reconstructions, that from the North Carolina reported by Kemp et al (2011) This raises some important issues, not least since the latter has been used recently as if they were a quasi-global average time series in combination with semi empirical global models of climate-driven sea-level change (Kemp et al, 2011). The contrast emphasises the need for multiple, geographically distributed salt-marsh RSL records from across the North Atlantic to determine forcing mechanisms

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