SlideShare a Scribd company logo
7
Most read
9
Most read
12
Most read
Sea-Level Change
Sea-levels are predicted to rise by 1m this century (by 2100).  Why?
Sea-Level Change Key Terms Eustatic  – global-scale sea level change caused by a change in the volume of water in the ocean store Isostatic  – local-scale sea level change caused by a change in the level of the land relative to the level of the sea. Emergence  – the impact of a relative FALL in sea level  (Marine Regression) Submergence  – the impact of a RISE in relative sea level  (Marine Transgression)
Eustatic (global) Changes A decrease in global temperatures leads to more precipitation occurring in the form of snow.  Eventually this snow turns to ice and so water is stored on land rather than being returned to the ocean store.  Consequently there is a global FALL in sea level. If global temperatures subsequently rise, glaciers retreat and ice melts causing a RISE in global sea level.
Isostatic (local) Changes During a glacial period, the weight of ice in ice sheets and glaciers adds weight to the earth’s crust. This causes the crust to sink lower into the mantle rock beneath. This results in an apparent rise in the level of the sea. At the end of the glacial period the ice melts and weight is lost from the crust causing it to slowly rise. The sea level will then appear to fall. Some places on the east coast of Scotland are rising at a rate of 7mm a year.
Landforms of Submergence Rias Fjords Fjards – submerged glacial lowlands Dalmatian Coasts – submerged valleys running parallel to the coast
Rias Rias are submerged river valleys. The lowest part of the river’s course and the floodplains alongside the river may be completely drowned, but the higher land remains exposed, e.g. Kingsbridge Estuary, Devon
In  cross section  the ria has relatively shallow water becoming increasingly deep towards the centre. The exposed valley sides are quite gently sloping. In  long section  rias are quite even with a smooth profile and water of uniform depth. In  plan view  they tend to be winding, reflecting the original route of the river and its valley.
Fjords Fjords are submerged glacial valleys. They have steep, cliff-like valley sides and the water is uniformly deep (often 1000m in depth). These were formed when glaciers eroded below sea-level. When the ice melted the valleys were flooded, e.g. Milford Sound fjord, New Zealand
The u-shaped cross-section reflects the original shape of the glacial valley. Unlike rias, fjords are not deepest at their mouths, but have a shallow section at the seaward end known as the threshold. Fjords have much straighter routes, due to the erosive power of the glacier.
Landforms of Emergence Raised Beaches Abandoned Coastlines
Raised Beaches Raised beaches, e.g. Little Gruinard, Ullapool are areas of former wave-cut platforms and their beaches which are left at a higher level than the present coastline. Abandoned cliffs, caves and stacks can also be found.
PLAY YOUR CARDS RIGHT Dalmatian Coast Abandoned Cliff Fjard Ria 2 3 5 7 8 9 1 6 4

More Related Content

PPTX
Geography fluvial landforms
PPTX
River Rejuvination
PPTX
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS - CORAL REEFS
PPTX
Hydrology and Fluvial Geo morphology for CAMBRIDGE AS level
PPTX
Costal landforms
PPT
Coastal Processes And Landforms
PPTX
CAMBRIDGE AS GEOGRAPHY - CASE STUDY: RIVER HARBOURNE
PDF
LANDSLIDES
Geography fluvial landforms
River Rejuvination
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: COASTAL ENVIRONMENTS - CORAL REEFS
Hydrology and Fluvial Geo morphology for CAMBRIDGE AS level
Costal landforms
Coastal Processes And Landforms
CAMBRIDGE AS GEOGRAPHY - CASE STUDY: RIVER HARBOURNE
LANDSLIDES

What's hot (20)

PPTX
AS GEOGRAPHY - ROCKS AND WEATHERING: WEATHERING AND ROCKS
PPT
land forms formed by seawaves
PPTX
PDF
GEOG 100--Lecture 17--Coastal Geomorphology
PPTX
CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY AS - HYDROLOGY AND FLUVIAL GEOMORPHOLOGY: 1.3 RIVER CHANN...
PPTX
Weather and Climate
DOCX
AS geography - Bangladesh case study for river flooding
PPTX
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: FOLD MOUNTAINS
PPTX
CAMBRIDGE AS GEOGRAPHY REVISION: ROCKS AND WEATHERING - 3.3 SLOPE PROCESSES
PPTX
River processes
PPT
Raised beaches and estuaries 2011
PPTX
Types of Rivers
PPTX
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: WEATHER MEASUREMENTS.
PPTX
coastal erosion
PDF
Fluvial Geomorphology
PPT
Geomorphology Topic 1 (Part 2) - Basic Concept
PPT
13.4 Stages of a River.ppt
PPT
River Channel Processes & Landforms
PPT
Coasts Introduction
PPTX
AS GEOGRAPHY - ROCKS AND WEATHERING: WEATHERING AND ROCKS
land forms formed by seawaves
GEOG 100--Lecture 17--Coastal Geomorphology
CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY AS - HYDROLOGY AND FLUVIAL GEOMORPHOLOGY: 1.3 RIVER CHANN...
Weather and Climate
AS geography - Bangladesh case study for river flooding
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: FOLD MOUNTAINS
CAMBRIDGE AS GEOGRAPHY REVISION: ROCKS AND WEATHERING - 3.3 SLOPE PROCESSES
River processes
Raised beaches and estuaries 2011
Types of Rivers
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: WEATHER MEASUREMENTS.
coastal erosion
Fluvial Geomorphology
Geomorphology Topic 1 (Part 2) - Basic Concept
13.4 Stages of a River.ppt
River Channel Processes & Landforms
Coasts Introduction
Ad

Similar to Sea Level Change AS (20)

PPT
Sea level change
PPTX
Submergent and emergent coastlines
PPT
Relief
PDF
CROWTHER-SIMON-4188377
DOCX
Sea level rise
PPT
002_Unit 2_Landforms_Part2--------------
PDF
Coastal Defense Management : A Group Report
PPTX
2. Types of relief
PPTX
Coastal land forms .erosional and depositional landforms
PDF
Sea level changes
PDF
Rising seas
PPTX
Rising seas
PPTX
sea Level fluctuations in geological past by Asmitdeep.pptx
PPTX
Unit 2 relief
PPTX
River landforms
PPT
Coastal Processes and Landforms
PPT
Chapter nine
PPT
Sea Level Rise and Disappearing Islands: Myth or Reality?
PPTX
Landform characterization through satellite image
Sea level change
Submergent and emergent coastlines
Relief
CROWTHER-SIMON-4188377
Sea level rise
002_Unit 2_Landforms_Part2--------------
Coastal Defense Management : A Group Report
2. Types of relief
Coastal land forms .erosional and depositional landforms
Sea level changes
Rising seas
Rising seas
sea Level fluctuations in geological past by Asmitdeep.pptx
Unit 2 relief
River landforms
Coastal Processes and Landforms
Chapter nine
Sea Level Rise and Disappearing Islands: Myth or Reality?
Landform characterization through satellite image
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Univ-Connecticut-ChatGPT-Presentaion.pdf
PPTX
O2C Customer Invoices to Receipt V15A.pptx
PDF
A novel scalable deep ensemble learning framework for big data classification...
PDF
Getting started with AI Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
PPT
Module 1.ppt Iot fundamentals and Architecture
PDF
Developing a website for English-speaking practice to English as a foreign la...
PDF
Microsoft Solutions Partner Drive Digital Transformation with D365.pdf
PDF
A contest of sentiment analysis: k-nearest neighbor versus neural network
PDF
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
PPT
Geologic Time for studying geology for geologist
PDF
Enhancing emotion recognition model for a student engagement use case through...
PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles – August ’25 Week III
PPTX
MicrosoftCybserSecurityReferenceArchitecture-April-2025.pptx
PDF
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
PDF
Five Habits of High-Impact Board Members
PDF
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
PDF
From MVP to Full-Scale Product A Startup’s Software Journey.pdf
PDF
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
PPTX
Group 1 Presentation -Planning and Decision Making .pptx
PDF
sustainability-14-14877-v2.pddhzftheheeeee
Univ-Connecticut-ChatGPT-Presentaion.pdf
O2C Customer Invoices to Receipt V15A.pptx
A novel scalable deep ensemble learning framework for big data classification...
Getting started with AI Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Module 1.ppt Iot fundamentals and Architecture
Developing a website for English-speaking practice to English as a foreign la...
Microsoft Solutions Partner Drive Digital Transformation with D365.pdf
A contest of sentiment analysis: k-nearest neighbor versus neural network
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
Geologic Time for studying geology for geologist
Enhancing emotion recognition model for a student engagement use case through...
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles – August ’25 Week III
MicrosoftCybserSecurityReferenceArchitecture-April-2025.pptx
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
Five Habits of High-Impact Board Members
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
From MVP to Full-Scale Product A Startup’s Software Journey.pdf
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
Group 1 Presentation -Planning and Decision Making .pptx
sustainability-14-14877-v2.pddhzftheheeeee

Sea Level Change AS

  • 2. Sea-levels are predicted to rise by 1m this century (by 2100). Why?
  • 3. Sea-Level Change Key Terms Eustatic – global-scale sea level change caused by a change in the volume of water in the ocean store Isostatic – local-scale sea level change caused by a change in the level of the land relative to the level of the sea. Emergence – the impact of a relative FALL in sea level (Marine Regression) Submergence – the impact of a RISE in relative sea level (Marine Transgression)
  • 4. Eustatic (global) Changes A decrease in global temperatures leads to more precipitation occurring in the form of snow. Eventually this snow turns to ice and so water is stored on land rather than being returned to the ocean store. Consequently there is a global FALL in sea level. If global temperatures subsequently rise, glaciers retreat and ice melts causing a RISE in global sea level.
  • 5. Isostatic (local) Changes During a glacial period, the weight of ice in ice sheets and glaciers adds weight to the earth’s crust. This causes the crust to sink lower into the mantle rock beneath. This results in an apparent rise in the level of the sea. At the end of the glacial period the ice melts and weight is lost from the crust causing it to slowly rise. The sea level will then appear to fall. Some places on the east coast of Scotland are rising at a rate of 7mm a year.
  • 6. Landforms of Submergence Rias Fjords Fjards – submerged glacial lowlands Dalmatian Coasts – submerged valleys running parallel to the coast
  • 7. Rias Rias are submerged river valleys. The lowest part of the river’s course and the floodplains alongside the river may be completely drowned, but the higher land remains exposed, e.g. Kingsbridge Estuary, Devon
  • 8. In cross section the ria has relatively shallow water becoming increasingly deep towards the centre. The exposed valley sides are quite gently sloping. In long section rias are quite even with a smooth profile and water of uniform depth. In plan view they tend to be winding, reflecting the original route of the river and its valley.
  • 9. Fjords Fjords are submerged glacial valleys. They have steep, cliff-like valley sides and the water is uniformly deep (often 1000m in depth). These were formed when glaciers eroded below sea-level. When the ice melted the valleys were flooded, e.g. Milford Sound fjord, New Zealand
  • 10. The u-shaped cross-section reflects the original shape of the glacial valley. Unlike rias, fjords are not deepest at their mouths, but have a shallow section at the seaward end known as the threshold. Fjords have much straighter routes, due to the erosive power of the glacier.
  • 11. Landforms of Emergence Raised Beaches Abandoned Coastlines
  • 12. Raised Beaches Raised beaches, e.g. Little Gruinard, Ullapool are areas of former wave-cut platforms and their beaches which are left at a higher level than the present coastline. Abandoned cliffs, caves and stacks can also be found.
  • 13. PLAY YOUR CARDS RIGHT Dalmatian Coast Abandoned Cliff Fjard Ria 2 3 5 7 8 9 1 6 4

Editor's Notes

  • #2: http://www.discoverysoftware.co.uk/GallerySeaLevel.htm