West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?

This study focuses on mean sea-level variability at the West African coast in the observational period (1993–2013) and its offshore waters, investigating its decadal variability, long-term trends and the large-scale climate patterns that are connected to its variability. To achieve this objective, s...

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Published in:Journal of Coastal Conservation
Main Authors: Evadzi, P.I.K., Zorita, E., Huenicke, B.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.hereon.de/id/37110
https://publications.hzg.de/id/37110
https://www.hzg.de/imperia/md/content/gkss/zentrale_einrichtungen/bibliothek/journals/2019/evadzi_37110.pdf
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spelling fthzgzmk:oai:publications.hereon.de:37110 2023-06-11T04:16:38+02:00 West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period? Evadzi, P.I.K. Zorita, E. Huenicke, B. 2019 https://publications.hereon.de/id/37110 https://publications.hzg.de/id/37110 https://www.hzg.de/imperia/md/content/gkss/zentrale_einrichtungen/bibliothek/journals/2019/evadzi_37110.pdf en eng Springer https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11852-019-00704-z urn:issn:1400-0350 https://publications.hereon.de/id/37110 https://publications.hzg.de/id/37110 https://www.hzg.de/imperia/md/content/gkss/zentrale_einrichtungen/bibliothek/journals/2019/evadzi_37110.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess open_access oa_gruen issn:1400-0350 Evadzi, P.I.K.; Zorita, E.; Huenicke, B.: West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?. In: Journal of Coastal Conservation. Vol. 23 (2019) 4, 759 - 771. (DOI: /10.1007/s11852-019-00704-z) info:eu-repo/semantics/article Zeitschrift Artikel 2019 fthzgzmk https://doi.org/10.1007/s11852-019-00704-z 2023-05-28T23:24:52Z This study focuses on mean sea-level variability at the West African coast in the observational period (1993–2013) and its offshore waters, investigating its decadal variability, long-term trends and the large-scale climate patterns that are connected to its variability. To achieve this objective, statistically analyses is performed on several available data sets: sea-level data from tide gauges (Takoradi, Tema and Forcados), satellite altimetry (combined TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1 and Jason-2/OSTM), gridded sea-level reconstruction (Church et al., J Clim 17(13):2609–2625, 2004), meteorological reanalysis (NCEP), a high-resolution ocean model simulation driven by this meteorological reanalysis, and, observational data sets (The Hadley Centre Global Sea Ice and Sea Surface Temperature (HadISST1), and the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation (AMO) index). Ghana is the only country along the West African coast with two relatively long sea-level records available (Takoradi and Tema), but with data quality concerns (Woodworth et. al., Afr J Mar Sci 29(3):321–330, 2007). Attempts are made to combine these two records, which cover different but overlapping periods, to construct a regional sea-level curve for Ghana (1929–1981) that may be regionally representative. A physical connection is identified between the AMO, sea-surface temperature and sea level in the Gulf of Guinea and mean sea-level trends and variability of the West African coast. It has been found that a stronger AMO is connected with higher mean sea-level in the Tropical Atlantic and in particular also at the Gulf of Guinea sea-level. This connection may explain the multidecadal variability of sea-level there, and in particular the negative trends between 1955 and 1975 and the positive trends thereafter. In addition, warmer sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Guinea are also connected with higher sea-level, although a simple estimation based on reasonable assumptions of the thermal expansion of the water column is not sufficient to explain the connection ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice Hereon Publications (Helmholtz-Zentrum) Journal of Coastal Conservation 23 4 759 771
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description This study focuses on mean sea-level variability at the West African coast in the observational period (1993–2013) and its offshore waters, investigating its decadal variability, long-term trends and the large-scale climate patterns that are connected to its variability. To achieve this objective, statistically analyses is performed on several available data sets: sea-level data from tide gauges (Takoradi, Tema and Forcados), satellite altimetry (combined TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1 and Jason-2/OSTM), gridded sea-level reconstruction (Church et al., J Clim 17(13):2609–2625, 2004), meteorological reanalysis (NCEP), a high-resolution ocean model simulation driven by this meteorological reanalysis, and, observational data sets (The Hadley Centre Global Sea Ice and Sea Surface Temperature (HadISST1), and the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation (AMO) index). Ghana is the only country along the West African coast with two relatively long sea-level records available (Takoradi and Tema), but with data quality concerns (Woodworth et. al., Afr J Mar Sci 29(3):321–330, 2007). Attempts are made to combine these two records, which cover different but overlapping periods, to construct a regional sea-level curve for Ghana (1929–1981) that may be regionally representative. A physical connection is identified between the AMO, sea-surface temperature and sea level in the Gulf of Guinea and mean sea-level trends and variability of the West African coast. It has been found that a stronger AMO is connected with higher mean sea-level in the Tropical Atlantic and in particular also at the Gulf of Guinea sea-level. This connection may explain the multidecadal variability of sea-level there, and in particular the negative trends between 1955 and 1975 and the positive trends thereafter. In addition, warmer sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Guinea are also connected with higher sea-level, although a simple estimation based on reasonable assumptions of the thermal expansion of the water column is not sufficient to explain the connection ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Evadzi, P.I.K.
Zorita, E.
Huenicke, B.
spellingShingle Evadzi, P.I.K.
Zorita, E.
Huenicke, B.
West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
author_facet Evadzi, P.I.K.
Zorita, E.
Huenicke, B.
author_sort Evadzi, P.I.K.
title West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
title_short West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
title_full West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
title_fullStr West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
title_full_unstemmed West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?
title_sort west african sea level variability under a changing climate - what can we learn from the observational period?
publisher Springer
publishDate 2019
url https://publications.hereon.de/id/37110
https://publications.hzg.de/id/37110
https://www.hzg.de/imperia/md/content/gkss/zentrale_einrichtungen/bibliothek/journals/2019/evadzi_37110.pdf
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_source issn:1400-0350
Evadzi, P.I.K.; Zorita, E.; Huenicke, B.: West African sea level variability under a changing climate - What can we learn from the observational period?. In: Journal of Coastal Conservation. Vol. 23 (2019) 4, 759 - 771. (DOI: /10.1007/s11852-019-00704-z)
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https://www.hzg.de/imperia/md/content/gkss/zentrale_einrichtungen/bibliothek/journals/2019/evadzi_37110.pdf
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