Global sea-level rise in the early Holocene revealed from North Sea peats

Open Access
Authors
  • Marc P Hijma
  • Sarah L Bradley
  • Kim M Cohen
  • Wouter van der Wal
  • Natasha L M Barlow
  • Bas Blank
  • Manfred Frechen
  • Rick Hennekam
  • Sytze van Heteren
  • Patrick Kiden
  • Antonis Mavritsakis
  • Bart M L Meijninger
  • Gert-Jan Reichart
  • Lutz Reinhardt
  • Kenneth F Rijsdijk ORCID logo
  • Annemiek Vink
  • Freek S Busschers
Publication date 20-03-2025
Journal Nature
Volume | Issue number 639 | 8055
Pages (from-to) 652-657
Number of pages 6
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract

Rates of relative sea-level rise during the final stage of the last deglaciation, the early Holocene, are key to understanding future ice melt and sea-level change under a warming climate1. Data about these rates are scarce2, and this limits insight into the relative contributions of the North American and Antarctic ice sheets to global sea-level rise during the early Holocene. Here we present an early Holocene sea-level curve based on 88 sea-level data points (13.7-6.2 thousand years ago (ka)) from the North Sea (Doggerland3,4). After removing the pattern of regional glacial isostatic adjustment caused by the melting of the Eurasian Ice Sheet, the residual sea-level signal highlights two phases of accelerated sea-level rise. Meltwater sourced from the North American and Antarctic ice sheets drove these two phases, peaking around 10.3 ka and 8.3 ka with rates between 8 mm yr-1 and 9 mm yr-1. Our results also show that global mean sea-level rise between 11 ka and 3 ka amounted to 37.7 m (2σ range, 29.3-42.2 m), reconciling the mismatch that existed between estimates of global mean sea-level rise based on ice-sheet reconstructions and previously limited early Holocene sea-level data. With its broad spatiotemporal coverage, the North Sea dataset provides critical constraints on the patterns and rates of the late-stage deglaciation of the North American and Antarctic ice sheets, improving our understanding of the Earth-system response to climate change.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08769-7
Downloads
s41586-025-08769-7 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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