Abstract

The real ocean surface-the equipotential surface of the geoid or the geodetic sea level-is rough and uneven and characterized by humps and depressions of several meters. The present geoid configuration cannot have remained stationary back in time. The main question is over what time units geoid changes may have played a significant role. The instability of the geoid configuration has not been considered previously. The geoid may change both horizontally (geographical dislocation of the geoid relief) and vertically (magnitudinal changes in relief). There are numerous variables (during different geological time units) that must have affected the geoid. Geoid changes must certainly have occurred during the Phanerozoic and the Late Quaternary. Holocene data also yield indication of geoid changes. Tide gauge data and Holocene eustatic short-period fluctuations seem to indicate geoid changes even during short-period time units. Geoid changes are related to fundamental geophysical-astronomical problem...

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