Author Topic: New Study: Chile’s Relative Sea Level Was 3.2 Meters Higher Than Today During The Mid-Holocene  (Read 20 times)

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New Study: Chile’s Relative Sea Level Was 3.2 Meters Higher Than Today During The Mid-Holocene
By Kenneth Richard on 17. June 2026

Higher sea levels were due to a warmer climate, or the consequence of more water in ocean basins rather than locked up on land as ice.

In a new study, scientists assess they can now clearly separate “tectonic and climate signals in Holocene sea-level records” by precisely identifying patterns of long-term vertical land motion near coastal regions.

Meters-higher relative sea levels during the Middle Holocene have often been attributed to land uplift, or glacio-isostatic rebound – the gradual rising of the Earth’s crust as the weight of glaciers and ice sheets melted away.

This tectonic attribution precluded explanations that the sea level highstands could have been connected to a warmer climate and consequent smaller ice sheets and glaciers.

In the study we learn tectonic signals along 500 km of Chilean coast have been largely constant over the last 125,000 years. In other words, there has been negligible vertical land motion in this region.

https://notrickszone.com/2026/06/17/new-study-chiles-relative-sea-level-was-3-2-meters-higher-than-today-during-the-mid-holocene/
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