Querying Guam Tide Gauge Records, ENSO & datum shift

In addition to the case of Aden, discussed in Parker & Ollier (2017) and Parker & O’Sullivan (2018), that is only one of the many where the data proposed by the PSMSL are not trustworthy, another example recently added to the long list is Guam (Parker & Ollier, 2018).

Guam, Apra Harbor

For the tide gauge of Guam, Apra Harbor, www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/stations/540.php, recently analysed in Parker & Ollier (2018), the PSMSL only mentions one of two data shifts following recent earthquakes, the one less evident of the two likely in the data. This datum shift is then used by NOAA to compute the rate of rise of the sea levels starting from low ENSO waters. The computation also suffers of the undetected datum shift, further magnifying the apparent sea level rate of rise.

Here below, Figure 1, the monthly and annual mean sea levels from PSMSL.

Guam1.a.png

www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/rlr.monthly.plots/540_high.png

www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/rlr.annual.plots/540_high.png

Guam1.bFigure 1 – Monthly and Annual mean sea levels from PSMSL.

According to NOAA, tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_station.shtml?id=1630000, “The relative sea level trend is 5.04 millimeters/year with a 95{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} confidence interval of +/- 4.15 mm/yr based on monthly mean sea level data from 1993 to 2017 which is equivalent to a change of 1.65 feet in 100 years.”. Figure 2. The monthly average mean sea levels have the seasonal cycle removed.

Guam2Figure 2 – Sea level trend analysis from NOAA. tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/plots/1630000_meantrend.png

The sea levels of Guam have been recently analysed by Parker & Ollier (2018), Figure 3 the monthly average mean sea levels.

Guam3.aa

Guam3.bb

Figure 3 – Monthly average mean sea levels (MSL) in Apra Harbor. (a) linear fittings. (b) 12 months moving averages. Data are from www.psmsl.org, the image is from Parker & Ollier (2018).

As shown in Figure 1, 2 and 3, we may note:

  • There is a gap of 2 months in January and February 1993, before the August 1993 earthquake, but no gap after the earthquake. There was no disruption of measurements following the August 1993 earthquake. The pattern before and after the earthquake seems marginally different.
  • There is a long gap of 14 months from December 1997 to February 1999. It follows the April 1997 earthquake, but it started 6 months later. It is trailed by two other gaps of 2 and 3 months, June to July 1999, and then September to November 1999. Basically, from December 1997 to December 1999, there have been difficult measurements or no measurements at all. While the pattern does not seem different before and immediately after the earthquake, it seems very different from the time the measurements restarted after the 14 months disruption.
  • The relative sea levels have been continuously reducing from January 1948 to August 1993 at a rate of -1.08 mm/year.
  • In August 1993 there is a likely datum shift of 20-30 mm following the 7.8 Mw Mag., IX MMI earthquake.
  • In February 1999, when the measurements restart after an interruption of 14 months following the April 1997 6.5 Mw Mag. VII MMI earthquake, there is the impression of an even larger second, additional datum shift of not less than 30-40 mm.

Now, PSMSL reports on October 16, 2002 “Guam – suspected land movement of 2-3cm in 1993 following earthquake.” Then, PSMSL reports on July 18, 2011 that the stability of the tide gauge is a concern. “The operators of the Guam tide gauge Centre for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services (CO-OPS) part of NOAA note that a change in the sea level trend occurs after the 1993 Guam earthquake. The stability of the tide gauge datum for the post earthquake is therefore a concern.CO-OPS continue to monitor the site.”

Surprisingly, there is no note in PSMSL explaining the reason why the measurements were discontinued for 14 months, and why they have been erratic in the following 6 months, following the April 1997 earthquake.

Similarly, surprisingly there is no mention in PSMSL of a possible second datum shift that seems very likely from the data, certainly more likely than the first.

Since January 1999, the sea levels have been continuously falling at a rate of -1.15 mm/year.

By accounting for the two datum shifts of 30 mm since September 1993 and another 30 mm since February 1999, and clearing the MSL time series of the subsidence rates of the inland domes of GUAM and GUUG, the absolute MSL is completely detrended only showing oscillations since January 1948 (Parker & Ollier, 2018).

The sea levels have been reducing in all the 3 periods of nearly continuous measurements separated by the two very likely datum-shifts (break-points).

Every alignment technique adopting break-points to analyse time series will evidence the magnitude of the two datum shifts as soon as their existence is admitted.

A datum shift is likely to have occurred in August 1993, the same time as the earthquake, and then before measurement restarted in February 1999, after the 14-months gap that followed the April 1997 earthquake. The two unaccounted datum shifts are 20-30 mm, and not less than 30-40 mm.

By neglecting the data collected prior of 1993 because of the “suspected land movement of 2-3 cm in 1993 following earthquake” as then done by NOAA, and neglecting the datum shift of February 1999, the analysis of the short record starting from low ENSO water levels of Figure 2 then provides a large, apparent, rate of rise exceeding the 5 mm/yr..

This rate of rise is then used as a proof of accelerating sea levels in the EPA pamphlet 19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/climate-change-gu.pdf. where it is written: “Sea level has risen by about four inches relative to Guam’s shoreline since 1993. 

If the oceans and atmosphere continue to warm, sea level around Guam is likely to rise one to three feet in the next century. Sea level rise submerges low-lying areas, erodes beaches, and exacerbates coastal flooding from typhoons and tsunamis. Coastal homes and infrastructure will flood more often as sea level rises because storm surges will become higher as well.

Homes, businesses, roads, and the Port of Guam are vulnerable to the impacts of storms and sea level rise.”

It does not seem appropriate to notice an everything but clear datum shift in 1993, while neglecting the more evident datum shift in 1998, to support NOAA position of computing the rate of rise of the sea levels in Guam by only considering the data since 1993, about low ENSO water levels, also including in the trend a very likely offset further increasing the rate of rise.

The EPA claim of four inches sea level rise since 1993 does not seem that “solid” science.

References

  1. Parker, A. & Ollier, C.D. (2017). Is the Sea Level Stable at Aden, Yemen?, Earth Systems and Environment, 1(2), p.18.
  2. Parker, A. & O’Sullivan, J., (2018), The Need of an Open, Fair Peer Review of Sea Levels Data, accepted paper, in press.
  3. Parker, A. & Ollier, C., (2018), The sea level of Guam, accepted paper, in press. Also preprints.org/manuscript/201803.0196/v1

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