Sea level
Sea level refers to the height of the ocean's surface averaged over time to exclude short-term fluctuations from tides, waves, and atmospheric effects, typically defined as the arithmetic mean of hourly water elevations observed over a 19-year tidal epoch relative to a fixed reference like the geoid or local land surface.[1] Global mean sea level (GMSL) provides a planetary average, accounting for gravitational, rotational, and density variations that cause local deviations from uniformity.[2] Over geological timescales, sea levels have varied dramatically due to changes in ocean basin volume from tectonic processes, such as seafloor spreading and subduction, and alterations in ocean water volume primarily driven by the growth and decay of continental ice sheets during glacial-interglacial cycles.[3] For instance, during the Last Glacial Maximum around 20,000 years ago, GMSL was approximately 120-130 meters lower than today owing to vast ice volumes locked on land.[4] These eustatic changes dominate long-term trends, superimposed on isostatic adjustments where land rebounds or subsides post-glaciation and steric effects from temperature and salinity variations affecting water density.[3] In the modern era, instrumental records from tide gauges and satellite altimetry indicate GMSL has risen by 21-24 centimeters since 1880, with rates accelerating from about 1.5 millimeters per year in the early 20th century to 3.7 millimeters per year on average since 1993, reaching 4.5 millimeters per year in recent years due to thermal expansion of seawater and melting of land-based ice.[5][6][7] This rise exhibits regional variability, with faster increases in subsiding areas like river deltas and slower or negative relative changes where land uplift occurs, complicating attributions to anthropogenic forcing amid natural decadal oscillations.[7] Controversies persist regarding the statistical significance of acceleration in tide gauge records versus satellite data, with some analyses questioning overestimation in projections that underweight empirical variability and post-glacial contributions.[7][8]