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Relative Sea Level Rise and Subsidence in Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico
註釋Data from two tide gage networks in Louisiana and the northern Gulf of Mexico were analyzed to determine local and regional trends in relative sea level rise. Eustatic correction factors were applied to the rates of relative sea level rise to determine rates of subsidence. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) maintains a network of 83 tide gage stations throughout coastal Louisiana. Of these, 20 have records adequate to represent our study period (1942-1982), and some date back to 1933. The USACE data set was used to determine the local and regional character of relative sea level rise in Louisiana. The National Ocean Survey (NOS) maintains nine tide gage stations throughout the northern Gulf of Mexico in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. All of these stations have an adequate period of record for this study, and some have records dating back to 1913. We used the NOS data set to determine the character of relative sea level rise and subsidence throughout the entire northern Gulf of Mexico. This investigation is the first systematic regional analysis of these tide gage stations that uses only the long-term water-level records.