Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to invite you to submit an abstract to the RH001 – Advances in Understanding, Monitoring, and Simulating Sea Level session, part of the Ocean Sciences Meeting to be held February 18-23, 2024 in New Orleans, LA. The session abstract is appended below. The abstract submission deadline is Wednesday, 13 September 2023, 23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT.
Please feel free to contact us for more information, and to forward this email to interested colleagues.
Best regards,
Angelica Rodriguez (JPL, NASA, USA, angelica....@jpl.nasa.gov)
Angélique Melet (Mercator Ocean, France, ame...@mercator-ocean.fr)
Jacob Steinberg (GFDL, USA, jacob.s...@noaa.gov)
John Krasting (GFDL, USA, john.k...@noaa.gov)
Taylor Asher (NOAA/NOS, USA, taylor...@noaa.gov)
(Apologies for any cross posting)
RH001 - Advances in Understanding, Monitoring, and Simulating Sea Level
Submit an Abstract to this Session
As conversations shift towards anticipating and mitigating coastal risks associated with climate change, there is increasing demand for actionable products spanning a range of spatial and temporal scales related to sea level. This knowledge and information is critical to inform decisions regarding investment into coastal planning and adaptation strategies. In this session, we invite submissions on recent advances in observational and modeling methods that improve process understanding and predictability of sea level, including sea level extremes, tides, coastal processes, annual to decadal sea level variability, and long-term projections of global and regional sea level rise. Results from emerging coupled and ocean-only model configurations and the incorporation of cryosphere processes relevant to addressing the long-term uncertainties associated with sea level projections are encouraged. Projects geared toward practitioner utilization, such as remote or in situ water level monitoring products, statistical or physical model predictions, and compound or coastal flood mapping, are invited. We also welcome submissions that describe the communication of sea level vulnerability, community and practitioner engagement, and community science efforts.