Abstract

Abstract. Sea level (SLH) variability at the Adriatic coast was investigated for the period 1872–2001 using monthly average values of observations at 13 tide gauge stations. Linear trends and seasonal cycles were investigated first and removed afterwards from the data. Empirical Orthogonal Functions (EOF) analysis was used further on remaining anomalies (SLA) to extract the regional intermonthly variability of SLH. It was found that the leading EOF and its principal component (PC) explain a major part of SLA variability (92%). The correlation between the reconstructed SLA, based on leading EOF and its PC, and overlapping observed SLA values for selected tide gauge stations is between 0.93 and 0.99. Actual SLH values at tide gauge stations can be reconstructed and some gaps in the data can be filled in on the basis of estimated SLA values if reasonable estimates of long-term trends and seasonal cycles are also available. A strong, seasonally dependent relationship between SLA at the Adriatic coast and atmospheric forcing, represented by sea level pressure (SLP) fields, was also found. Comparing the time series of leading PC and gridded SLP data for the period 1948–2001, the highest correlation coefficients (r) of –0.92 in winter, –0.84 in spring, –0.66 in summer, and –0.91 in autumn were estimated for a SLP grid point located in northern Italy. The SLP variability on this grid point contains information about the isostatic response of the sea level at the Adriatic coast, but can also be treated as a sort of teleconnection index representing the large-scale SLP variability across central and southern Europe. To some extent the large-scale SLP variability that affects the SLA at the Adriatic coast can be related to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), because significant correlations were found between the NAO index and the first PC of SLA (rwinter=–0.56, rspring=–0.45, rsummer=–0.48, and rautumn=–0.43) for the period 1872–2001. The use of partial least-squares (PLS) regression between large-scale SLP fields and SLA only slightly improved the description of the SLA dependence on SLP forcing in comparison to the single grid point approach. A strong relationship between atmospheric pressure and the sea level could represent an additional possibility for filling in the gaps in the tide gauge data. Keywords. Oceanography: general (Climate and interannual variability) – Oceanography: physical (Air-sea interactions; sea level variations)

Highlights

  • The sea level is influenced by a large number of factors operating at different temporal and spatial scales

  • Since some recent studies (Tsimplis and Baker, 2000; Tsimplis and Josey, 2001; Woolf et al, 2003) report a strong relationship between sea level height (SLH) in the Mediterranean and atmospheric circulation, especially North Atlantic Oscillations (NAO), we investigated the relationship of SLH variability on intermonthly scale with atmospheric forcing represented by the variability of large-scale sea level pressure fields across Europe and by the NAO index

  • The shift in the early 1960s is especially evident in the annual averages of sea level at Trieste and Venezia (Punta della Salute)

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Summary

Introduction

The sea level is influenced by a large number of factors operating at different temporal and spatial scales. There are essentially two types of observations that measure the sea level directly and can be used to study the variability of the sea level in different time scales: tide gauge measurements, which in a few cases go back over 100 years, and satellite altimeter measurements, which are available only since early 1990s (Cazenave and Nerem, 2004). The main dissadvantages of tide gauge data, which were used in our study, are their poor spatial distribution and their attachment to the land. To extract the real changes in the sea level from the coastal tide gauge data, the variability due to the crustal movements needs to be averaged (Zerbini et al, 1996), which

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