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The Tides They Are A-Changin': A Comprehensive Review of Past and Future Nonastronomical Changes in Tides, Their Driving Mechanisms, and Future Implications: A comprehensive review of past and future non‐astronomical changes in tides, their driving mechanisms and future implications

  • Ivan D. Haigh
  • , Mark D. Pickering
  • , J. A. Mattias Green
  • , Brian K. Arbic
  • , Arne Arns
  • , Sonke Dangendorf
  • , David F. Hill
  • , Kevin Horsburgh
  • , Tom Howard
  • , Deborah Idier
  • , David A. Jay
  • , Leon Jaenicke
  • , Serena B. Lee
  • , Malte Mueller
  • , Michael Schindelegger
  • , Stefan A. Talke
  • , Sophie-Berenice Wilmes
  • , Philip L. Woodworth
  • University of Southampton
  • University of Michigan
  • University of Rostock
  • Old Dominion University
  • Marine Mammal Institute, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Oregon State University, Newport, Oregon
  • National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool
  • Met Office
  • Risk and Climate Change Unit, Orléans
  • Portland State University
  • University of Siegen
  • Griffith University, Queensland
  • Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Oslo
  • Universitat Bonn, Bonn

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Scientists and engineers have observed for some time that tidal amplitudes at many locations are shifting considerably due to nonastronomical factors. Here we review comprehensively these important changes in tidal properties, many of which remain poorly understood. Over long geological time scales,tectonic processes drive variations in basin size, depth, and shape and hence the resonant properties of ocean basins. On shorter geological time scales, changes in oceanic tidal properties are dominated by variations in water depth. A growing number of studies have identified widespread, sometimes regionally coherent,positive, and negative trends in tidal constituents and levels during the 19th, 20th, and early 21st centuries.Determining the causes is challenging because a tide measured at a coastal gauge integrates the effects of local, regional, and oceanic changes. Here, we highlight six main factors that can cause changes in measured tidal statistics on local scales and a further eight possible regional/global driving mechanisms. Since only a few studies have combined observations and models, or modeled at a temporal/spatial resolution capable of resolving both ultralocal and large‐scale global changes, the individual contributions from local and regional mechanisms remain uncertain. Nonetheless, modeling studies project that sea level rise and climate change will continue to alter tides over the next several centuries, with regionally coherent modes of change caused by alterations to coastal morphology and ice sheet extent. Hence, a better understanding of the causes and consequences of tidal variations is needed to help assess the implications for coastal defense, risk assessment, and ecological change
Iaith wreiddiolSaesneg
Rhif yr erthygle2018RG000636
CyfnodolynReviews of Geophysics
Cyfrol58
Rhif cyhoeddi1
Dyddiad ar-lein cynnar13 Rhag 2019
Dynodwyr Gwrthrych Digidol (DOIs)
StatwsCyhoeddwyd - Maw 2020

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Ôl bys

Gweld gwybodaeth am bynciau ymchwil 'The Tides They Are A-Changin': A Comprehensive Review of Past and Future Nonastronomical Changes in Tides, Their Driving Mechanisms, and Future Implications: A comprehensive review of past and future non‐astronomical changes in tides, their driving mechanisms and future implications'. Gyda’i gilydd, maen nhw’n ffurfio ôl bys unigryw.

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