Global mean sea level higher than present in the Holocene: supporting code and data ...

Description This directory contains the environment files, input files, submit scripts, Jupyter notebooks, and output files to reproduce the main, extended, and supplementary figures from: Creel, R.C., Austermann, J., Kopp, R., Khan, N., Albrecht, T., Kinglake, J., Global mean sea level higher than...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Creel, Roger, Austermann, Jacqueline, Kopp, Robert, Khan, Nicole, Albrecht, Torsten, Kingslake, Jonathan
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7986160
https://zenodo.org/record/7986160
Description
Summary:Description This directory contains the environment files, input files, submit scripts, Jupyter notebooks, and output files to reproduce the main, extended, and supplementary figures from: Creel, R.C., Austermann, J., Kopp, R., Khan, N., Albrecht, T., Kinglake, J., Global mean sea level higher than present in the Holocene (2023). in review, Nature. https://eartharxiv.org/repository/view/5419/ See README.md for descriptions of each file. Abstract Global mean sea-level (GMSL) change can provide insight on how ice sheets, glaciers, and oceans respond to warming. The Holocene (11.7 ka to present) marks a time when temperatures may have exceeded early industrial (1850 CE) values . Evidence from Greenland and Antarctica indicates that both ice sheets retreated inland of their present-day extents during the Holocene, yet previous GMSL reconstructions suggest that Holocene GMSL never surpassed early industrial levels. We combine relative sea-level observations with glacial isostatic adjustment predictions from an ...