31 research outputs found
Review Article: Sea Level Rise: The Facts and the Future
Sea level records from the Pacific are analyzed to determine the
rate of long-term sea level rise and its relation to climate change. The trend is
largely dependent on vertical movements of the land on which the sea level
gauges are located and varies from place to place. Other obvious contributions to
sea level rise come from melting of glaciers, from global warming, and from sea
floor spreading. Present rate of sea level rise is about 1mm per year and is subject
to a large uncertainty. Assumptions about global warming in conjunction with
the greenhouse effect are critically reviewed to project possible rise of sea level in
the next 50 yr. It is concluded that effects of a doubling world population within
the next 40 yr will have much more disastrous consequences for our environment
than potential rise of sea level
Physical Oceanography of the Southeast Asian waters
This book is the outcome of my analysis of all available knowledge of the Southeast Asian Waters. It is hoped that workers in the region, whether in oceanography or other branches of science may find it a source of information and a stimulus to undertake further research in these waters. Some chapters in this book are summaries and condensations of already known facts, but others offer new ideas and interpretations, particularly those chapters on monsoon circulations and their dynamics, on deep circulation and its relation to surface circulation, on the energy exchange between sea and atmosphere, and on the quantitative description of the exchange of water in the deep sea basins