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Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability
Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability
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Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability
Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability

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Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability
Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability
Journal Article

Coastal Sea Level Observations Record the Twentieth-Century Enhancement of Decadal Climate Variability

2023
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Overview
Changes in the amplitude of decadal climate variability over the twentieth century have been noted, with most evidence derived from tropical Pacific sea surface temperature records. However, the length, spatial coverage, and stability of most instrumental records are insufficient to robustly identify such nonstationarity, or resolve its global spatial structure. Here, it is found that the long-term, stable, observing platform provided by tide gauges reveals a dramatic increase in the amplitude and spatial coherence of decadal (11–14-yr period) coastal sea level (ζ) variability between 1960 and 2000. During this epoch, western North American ζ was approximately out of phase with ζ in Sydney, Australia, and led northeastern U.S. ζ by approximately 1–2 years. The amplitude and timing of changes in decadal ζ variability in these regions are consistent with changes in atmospheric variability. Specifically, central equatorial Pacific wind stress and Labrador Sea heat flux are highly coherent and exhibit contemporaneous, order-of-magnitude increases in decadal power. These statistical relationships have a mechanistic underpinning: Along the western North American coastline, equatorial winds are known to drive rapidly propagating ζ signals along equatorial and coastal waveguides, while a 1–2-yr lag between Labrador Sea heat fluxes and northeastern United States ζ is consistent with a remotely forced, buoyancy-driven, mechanism. Tide gauges thus provide strong independent support for an increase in interbasin coherence on decadal time scales over the second half of the twentieth century, with implications for both the interpretation and prediction of climate and sea level variability.