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Koen Vogel's avatar

It seems that the scientists calculating sea level rise have a number of conflicting opinions. The original comment in the post was meant as support to the statement that an immediate 20 m sea level rise is highly unlikely, because of the corals, but also because an unrealistic amount of energy would be required, and that such a flood would cause massive onshore erosion that hasn't been observed. 5 m per decennium, century or millennium is still much less than 20 m in an instant. Thanks for sharing your insights.

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Koen Vogel's avatar

Hi Betz12345, thanks for your interest. There are numerous articles describing coral reef growth rates during the last deglaciation. For example, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-00966-x, describe a growth rate of 5-6 m per millennium, and the sea-level rise curve commonly used https://dlab.epfl.ch/wikispeedia/wpcd/images/119/11900.png.htm is based on coral reef growth rates . All these coral reefs survived. To my knowledge no serious study proposed a sudden 20+ m sea level rise. Such a sudden, 20 m sea-level rise is therefore a hypothetical. If it had happened globally then most coral reef systems would have perished.

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