Title: Characteristics of Sea Level Records
1Characteristics of Sea Level Records
- Philip L. Woodworth
- Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level
- With thanks to Simon Williams
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3 Definitions
- The expression sea level means different
things to different people. - Sea Level for us means
- The height of the sea measured relative to a mark
on the nearby land called the Tide Gauge
Benchmark
4Sea levels measured by tide gauges at the Newlyn
Lighthouse tidal observatory are measured
relative to the TGBM in the floor of the building
5Sea Level Measurements
- Sea level is measured by a tide gauge
- Values of sea level (or sea surface height) are
either spot-measurements at regular time
intervals, or averages (called integrations) over
the time intervals. - For most tidal, storm surge or Mean Sea Level
work, time intervals of 5, 6, or 15 minutes are
adequate. - For tsunami work, time intervals of a minute or
less are usually needed.
6A Sea Level Record will show
- The ocean tide
- On timescales of minutes to hours, there could be
signals due to seiches or tsunamis - On timescales of hours to days, there could be
signals due to storm surges - On longer timescales, there could be seasonal and
longer changes and even, at the longest
timescales, signals due to climate change
7Tides
- Periodic movements which are directly related in
amplitude and phase to some periodic geophysical
force - The dominant geophysical forcing function is the
variation of the gravitational field on the
surface of the earth, caused by regular movements
of the moon-earth and earth-sun systems.
8Tidal signals in March 1981 at five sites which
have very different tidal regimes Karumba
diurnal Musayid mixed Kilindini
semidiurnal Bermuda semidiurnal Courtown
shallow sea distortion Lunar characteristics
responsible for these tidal patterns
9Frequency distribution of hourly tidal levels
Newlyn, semidiurnal
Karumba, diurnal
10The Tide
To learn about tides read chapters 2-5 of David
Pughs book
11Main Points about the Tide to make here
- Tidal characteristics at any location can be
determined well from a year of good tide gauge
data - The knowledge obtained can be used to produce
Tables of Predicted Tide Levels (Tide Tables)
for local use - Tidal and Non-tidal components of the sea level
record can be separated easily using Harmonic
Tidal Analysis of a tide gauge data set.
12Non-Tidal Changes
- Storm surges caused by changes in air pressure
and winds - Seiches due to resonant behavior of harbours and
bays (caused by many things, often wind) - Seasonal, interannual changes due to changes in
water density - Tsunami caused by earthquakes
- And many more non-tidal sources.
13Mean Sea Level
- Daily MSL is calculated by applying a suitable
filter (see IOC Manual III for details) to the
measured tide gauge data (i.e. not the tidal or
non-tidal parts separately, but the measured
values) - Monthly MSL is then defined as the arithmetic
average of the daily MSL values in that month - Annual MSL is defined as the average of the daily
MSL values in a year
14Typical analysis of monthly mean sea levels
Periodic tidal terms (nodal, annual and
semi-annual)
Long term mean and trend
residuals
Meteorological effects
15Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level
- Time series of MSL are collected by the PSMSL
- Long records show signals due to seasonal
processes, El Nino, and sea and land level
changes - One goal in ODINAFRICA is to eventually have long
records of MSL from more African stations
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17Sea Level Changes in Last 100 Years
- Past 100 years
- Most PSMSL records show evidence for rising sea
levels during the past century - IPCC Third Assessment Report concluded that
there has been a global rise of approximately
10-20 cm during the past 100 years
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19- Types of Sea Level Records
- Real-time. Data are often transmitted to a
warning centre which can look out for flooding
due to storm surges or tsunamis. Delay (latency)
has to be as short as possible so there is no
time for detailed inspection of the record - Delayed Mode. Delay is not a major issue. Data
are archived by a centre for subsequent detailed
analysis and removal of errors. Such
highest-quality data are needed for scientific
research, for production of a range of products
(e.g. tide tables), for computation of MSL etc. - There are almost 2 different communities of
people involved Operational agencies,
Scientists/Engineers
20- Why do we care about tidal analysis if we just
want to provide real-time data and monthly MSL
(neither of which require tidal analysis in
theory)? - Two main reasons
- The separation of the sea level record into tidal
and non-tidal components is needed if one needs
to produce tide tables or tidal predictions - The non-tidal signals (seiches, tsunamis) become
clearly identified - Tidal analysis also enables errors in the sea
level time series to be identified ?
highest-quality data for subsequent analysis
21How does a tidal analysis work?
- The tide is parameterised in terms of harmonics
with periods specified by the orbits of the Moon
and Sun but with unknown amplitudes and phase
i.e.
Tide
The unknown parameters are Z0 and the (Hj, gj).
The fitting is adjusted so that the sum of the
squares of the difference between the observed
and computed tidal levels is minimized. The
residuals to the fit are considered to be the
non-tidal terms
22An example maybe not the best but one I had
available from Port Stanley Nov-Dec 2004
Measured
Tide
23Non-tidal
In the non-tidal record 1. Variations of a few
days, amplitude of a few cm (this is southern
summer so no big storm surges) 2. A lot of
high-frequency noise of a few cm due to harbour
seiches 3. On 27 December arrival of the Sumatra
tsunami (15 cm or so) ? None of this is evident
from looking at the total measured record.
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25- The non-tidal component is often called the
Residual (or sometimes the tidal residual). - It will be immediately clear (especially with
some experience) by looking at the residuals if
there is - A spike or jump in the data due to instrumental
faults - A timing error due to a section of data being
given the wrong time - And many other errors ? see the IOC Manuals
- These errors can then be fixed in the data set.
The final data set is called the Quality
Controlled Delayed-Mode data set.
26Such tidal analysis can be undertaken using one
of the software packages available for the GLOSS
and ODINAFRICA programmes, see http//www.pol.ac.
uk/psmsl/training In this course we will be
using the TIDE TASKS FOR WINDOWS package.