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<blockquote data-quote="wkmac" data-source="post: 2933078" data-attributes="member: 2189"><p>Google Isostatic Rebound as this plays into both rising and lowering sea levels in various locations all at the same time. NASA posted an article in August 2015 entitled <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/glacial-rebound-the-not-so-solid-earth" target="_blank"><span style="color: #ff0000"><strong>"Glacial Rebound: The Not So Solid Earth"</strong></span></a> in which the following was stated:</p><p></p><p><em>"According to the 23-year record of satellite data from NASA and its partners, the sea level is rising a few millimeters a year -- a fraction of an inch. If you live on the U.S. East Coast, though, your sea level is rising two or three times faster than average. If you live in Scandinavia, it's falling. Residents of China's Yellow River delta are swamped by sea level rise of more than nine inches (25 centimeters) a year."</em></p><p></p><p>Since the last ice age concluded and we entered the post glacial warming of the Holocene 11,600 BP (before present) years ago, isostatic robound has been taking place and will continue another 10k years until the earth's crust settles from all the weight of ice from the last ice age. This also assumes we don't re-enter another ice age which ice cores suggest is mostly earth's normal climate and such ice occur on cycles of every 100k years with brief warmings in between where such ice return will once again depress the earth's floating mantle causing sea level collapse between earth crust rising from ice weight to the massive amounts of water stored up in massive continent wide ice sheets. Between stored up water in ice sheet and crustal inflation, sea levels at the end of the last ice age were around 400 plus feet lower than they are today. Some argue that several rapid ice melts known as <a href="https://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/gornitz_10/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #ff0000"><strong>pulse water</strong></span></a> releasing could well be some of the sources of ancient flood myths that are told world wide.</p><p></p><p>The more I read on the subject, the more I conclude that sea levels have never been static nor will be and that there are many factors that comes into play concerning their rise or fall.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wkmac, post: 2933078, member: 2189"] Google Isostatic Rebound as this plays into both rising and lowering sea levels in various locations all at the same time. NASA posted an article in August 2015 entitled [URL='https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/glacial-rebound-the-not-so-solid-earth'][COLOR=#ff0000][B]"Glacial Rebound: The Not So Solid Earth"[/B][/COLOR][/URL] in which the following was stated: [I]"According to the 23-year record of satellite data from NASA and its partners, the sea level is rising a few millimeters a year -- a fraction of an inch. If you live on the U.S. East Coast, though, your sea level is rising two or three times faster than average. If you live in Scandinavia, it's falling. Residents of China's Yellow River delta are swamped by sea level rise of more than nine inches (25 centimeters) a year."[/I] Since the last ice age concluded and we entered the post glacial warming of the Holocene 11,600 BP (before present) years ago, isostatic robound has been taking place and will continue another 10k years until the earth's crust settles from all the weight of ice from the last ice age. This also assumes we don't re-enter another ice age which ice cores suggest is mostly earth's normal climate and such ice occur on cycles of every 100k years with brief warmings in between where such ice return will once again depress the earth's floating mantle causing sea level collapse between earth crust rising from ice weight to the massive amounts of water stored up in massive continent wide ice sheets. Between stored up water in ice sheet and crustal inflation, sea levels at the end of the last ice age were around 400 plus feet lower than they are today. Some argue that several rapid ice melts known as [URL='https://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/gornitz_10/'][COLOR=#ff0000][B]pulse water[/B][/COLOR][/URL] releasing could well be some of the sources of ancient flood myths that are told world wide. The more I read on the subject, the more I conclude that sea levels have never been static nor will be and that there are many factors that comes into play concerning their rise or fall. [/QUOTE]
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