Pets Fanatic on MSN
Scientists have been getting sea level heights wrong, new study says up to 132 million more people are at risk
Scientists Have Been Getting Sea Level Heights Wrong, New Study Says Up to 132 Million More People Are at Risk ...
The findings have concerning implications for hundreds of millions living in coastal communities around the world - and ...
A new study in the journal Nature says most sea level rise research may have underestimated coastal water heights by an average of 1 foot.
After analyzing 385 studies related to coastal areas and sea level rise, scientists found a significant discrepancy between geoid measurements and actual sea levels, especially in the global south.
An analysis of coastal impact assessments revealed that the majority are not based on direct sea-level and land-elevation ...
New Scientist on MSN
Sea levels around the world are much higher than we thought
Most coastal risk assessments have underestimated current sea levels, meaning tens of millions of people face losing their homes to rising waters earlier than expected ...
Humans are a coastal species. More than one in ten people in the world live within three miles of the shore, and about 40 ...
Sea levels across the world are already “much higher” than most scientific assessments have assumed, according to new research, making coasts even more vulnerable to rising oceans as a result of ...
Sea levels along coasts around the world are much higher than assumed because of errors in the way they have been calculated, according to a study by Wageningen University and published in scientific ...
A major review of coastal climate studies warns that sea-level rise risks may be significantly underestimated due to errors in how elevation and sea-level data are combined. The findings raise ...
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