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JohnR 12-03-2015 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1087764)
On the whole state shoreline-wise at times...the Charlestown work had current meters at the proposed outfall site, so I have used the numbers they got from that study in the late 70's.

Cool


Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1087764)
What do you mean compare then and now?

Any radiation comparisons? Cleaner? Same? Or is it just the current / flow measurements?

Can you gauge how much sea level rise we have seen in the last 40 years?

RIROCKHOUND 12-03-2015 10:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1087766)
Cool
Any radiation comparisons? Cleaner? Same? Or is it just the current / flow measurements?

Not what I do. No idea. Too much chemistry for me :smash:

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1087766)
Can you gauge how much sea level rise we have seen in the last 40 years?

Easy.
Newport Tide Gauge 1930-now 2.74mm/yr (11cm or so in 40 years)
If you play games with statistics you can get a slightly higher trend the last 25 years, which would roughly match the satellite altimeter record of 3.3 mm/yr since 1993.

Doesn't sound like much, but much higher than the century(s) before, which was 1.2-1.7 mm/yr (estimates vary). There are many areas flooding now on spring high tides that didn't a decade ago; in many cases we build that close to the shoreline, that small changes in SL have big implications.

Scarier when you look at where the 3.3 mm/yr and the older tide gauges (globally) fit on curves modeling SL rise; we are on the higher side of things, and this includes models made independent of the data collected the last 20 years.

However high it ultimately goes in this century and beyond, we know it is rising, which means no matter what, things ain't getting better along the coastline.

spence 12-03-2015 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1087768)
Easy.
Newport Tide Gauge 1930-now 2.74mm/yr (11cm or so in 40 years)
If you play games with statistics you can get a slightly higher trend the last 25 years, which would roughly match the satellite altimeter record of 3.3 mm/yr since 1993.

Doesn't sound like much, but much higher than the century(s) before, which was 1.2-1.7 mm/yr (estimates vary). There are many areas flooding now on spring high tides that didn't a decade ago; in many cases we build that close to the shoreline, that small changes in SL have big implications.

Scarier when you look at where the 3.3 mm/yr and the older tide gauges (globally) fit on curves modeling SL rise; we are on the higher side of things, and this includes models made independent of the data collected the last 20 years.

However high it ultimately goes in this century and beyond, we know it is rising, which means no matter what, things ain't getting better along the coastline.

EPIC FAIL DR ROCKHOUND

http://www.eastbayri.com/opinion/let...n-i-was-a-boy/

RIROCKHOUND 12-03-2015 11:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by spence (Post 1087769)

Look at the last comment (someone forwarded this to me a few weeks ago)
:hidin:



The plural of anecdote is NOT data!

JohnR 12-03-2015 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1087768)
Easy.
Newport Tide Gauge 1930-now 2.74mm/yr (11cm or so in 40 years)
If you play games with statistics you can get a slightly higher trend the last 25 years, which would roughly match the satellite altimeter record of 3.3 mm/yr since 1993.

Doesn't sound like much, but much higher than the century(s) before, which was 1.2-1.7 mm/yr (estimates vary). There are many areas flooding now on spring high tides that didn't a decade ago; in many cases we build that close to the shoreline, that small changes in SL have big implications.

Scarier when you look at where the 3.3 mm/yr and the older tide gauges (globally) fit on curves modeling SL rise; we are on the higher side of things, and this includes models made independent of the data collected the last 20 years.

However high it ultimately goes in this century and beyond, we know it is rising, which means no matter what, things ain't getting better along the coastline.

Thanks, dude!

RIROCKHOUND 12-03-2015 07:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1087803)
Thanks, dude!

In this forum, I am usually talking out of my ass :faga:. On this topic I know a thing or two for a change :cheers:


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