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Trends in high sea levels of German North Sea gauges compared to regional mean sea level changes

Trends in high sea levels of German North Sea gauges compared to regional mean sea level changes
Trends in high sea levels of German North Sea gauges compared to regional mean sea level changes
The impacts of rising mean sea levels will be felt most acutely during periods of extreme high sea levels which are caused by the combination of mean sea level, tides and storm surges. In this paper, we examine sea level records from six tide gauges along the German North Sea coastline to determine if changes in high sea levels observed throughout the 20th century and early 21st century were primarily driven by increases in mean sea level (i.e. like what has been observed by other authors in most parts of the world) or whether other factors, such as changes in ocean tides or storm surges also contributed significantly to observed changes in high water in this region. Time-series of annual 80th, 85th, 90th, 95th, 99th, and 99.9th percentiles are derived from the sea level records and trends are assessed using linear regression for the entire time periods for which datasets are available at each site and for the common period from 1953 to 2008. The percentile time-series are subsequently reduced relative to mean sea level and a second set of trends are estimated. At all sites and percentile levels, significant positive trends are evident for the observed sea level data. Once the percentile time-series are reduced relative to mean sea level the remaining trends are still significant at the 1?-confidence level, with the exception of the 99.9th percentiles since the standard errors are large. Using a non-linear trend analysis, on the long Cuxhaven record, we find that prior to the mid-1950s and from about 1990 onwards, changes in high sea levels were not different from mean sea level changes. However, from the mid-1950s to 1990 changes were significantly different from those observed in mean sea level. Possible reasons for this appear to be due to changes in the amplitudes of several main tidal constituents, which are apparent since the mid-1950s and decadal variability in the storm activity (with strong westerly winds in the North Atlantic region from 1960 to the 1990s).
Extreme sea levels, Mean sea level, Storm surges, German Bight, North Sea
0278-4343
111-120
Mudersbach, Christoph
480f1e6e-5496-4a03-b32b-8d321b2350fe
Wahl, Thomas
6506794a-1f35-4803-b7f7-98702e57e667
Haigh, Ivan D.
945ff20a-589c-47b7-b06f-61804367eb2d
Jensen, Jürgen
5188f969-c5e8-47e2-9e27-771067712095
Mudersbach, Christoph
480f1e6e-5496-4a03-b32b-8d321b2350fe
Wahl, Thomas
6506794a-1f35-4803-b7f7-98702e57e667
Haigh, Ivan D.
945ff20a-589c-47b7-b06f-61804367eb2d
Jensen, Jürgen
5188f969-c5e8-47e2-9e27-771067712095

Mudersbach, Christoph, Wahl, Thomas, Haigh, Ivan D. and Jensen, Jürgen (2013) Trends in high sea levels of German North Sea gauges compared to regional mean sea level changes. Continental Shelf Research, 65, 111-120. (doi:10.1016/j.csr.2013.06.016).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The impacts of rising mean sea levels will be felt most acutely during periods of extreme high sea levels which are caused by the combination of mean sea level, tides and storm surges. In this paper, we examine sea level records from six tide gauges along the German North Sea coastline to determine if changes in high sea levels observed throughout the 20th century and early 21st century were primarily driven by increases in mean sea level (i.e. like what has been observed by other authors in most parts of the world) or whether other factors, such as changes in ocean tides or storm surges also contributed significantly to observed changes in high water in this region. Time-series of annual 80th, 85th, 90th, 95th, 99th, and 99.9th percentiles are derived from the sea level records and trends are assessed using linear regression for the entire time periods for which datasets are available at each site and for the common period from 1953 to 2008. The percentile time-series are subsequently reduced relative to mean sea level and a second set of trends are estimated. At all sites and percentile levels, significant positive trends are evident for the observed sea level data. Once the percentile time-series are reduced relative to mean sea level the remaining trends are still significant at the 1?-confidence level, with the exception of the 99.9th percentiles since the standard errors are large. Using a non-linear trend analysis, on the long Cuxhaven record, we find that prior to the mid-1950s and from about 1990 onwards, changes in high sea levels were not different from mean sea level changes. However, from the mid-1950s to 1990 changes were significantly different from those observed in mean sea level. Possible reasons for this appear to be due to changes in the amplitudes of several main tidal constituents, which are apparent since the mid-1950s and decadal variability in the storm activity (with strong westerly winds in the North Atlantic region from 1960 to the 1990s).

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More information

Published date: 15 August 2013
Keywords: Extreme sea levels, Mean sea level, Storm surges, German Bight, North Sea
Organisations: Energy & Climate Change Group, Physical Oceanography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 356887
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/356887
ISSN: 0278-4343
PURE UUID: 0300530c-bc74-4351-8662-e1c27bb2f175
ORCID for Ivan D. Haigh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9722-3061

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Sep 2013 15:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:26

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Contributors

Author: Christoph Mudersbach
Author: Thomas Wahl
Author: Ivan D. Haigh ORCID iD
Author: Jürgen Jensen

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