At current rates of sea level rise, Japan will be submerged in only infinity years.
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- 100% Wind By 2030
- It Is A Nice Idea, But ….
- Climate Grifting Shutting Down
- Fundamental Pillars Of Democracy
- An Inconvenient Truth
- Antarctic Meltdown Update
- “Trump eyes major cuts to NOAA research”
- Data Made Simple II – Sneak Preview
- Attacks On Democracy
- Scientists Warn
- Upping The Ante
- Our New Leadership
- Grok Defines Fake News
- Arctic Meltdown Update
- The Savior Of Humanity
- President Trump Explains The Stock Market
- Net Zero In Europe
- The Canadian Hockey Stick
- Dogs Cause Hurricanes, Tornadoes And Droughts
- 50 Years Of Climate Devastation
- Climate Cycles
- Hiding The Decline
- Careful Research At BBC News
- New Video : Man Made Climate Emergency
- Geoengineering To Save The Planet
Recent Comments
- DABA13 on 100% Wind By 2030
- Gamecock on 100% Wind By 2030
- gordon vigurs on It Is A Nice Idea, But ….
- arn on 100% Wind By 2030
- gordon vigurs on 100% Wind By 2030
- arn on It Is A Nice Idea, But ….
- arn on It Is A Nice Idea, But ….
- dm on 100% Wind By 2030
- conrad ziefle on 100% Wind By 2030
- conrad ziefle on It Is A Nice Idea, But ….
Sure that isn’t a very large negative number of years? LOL
-Scott
It is not annual statistics for sea rise that will determine Japan’s descent into the ocean. It will be the sudden drop of the tectonic plates into the subduction zone. Over 1000 earthquakes in the last 30 days with 4
major quakes in the last 2 days…the land around Fukushima is dropping daily and moving away from the southern region. I suspect that if the numbers above are broken down to the last few months of data, you would see and rapid rising of sea levels. There are so many factors to consider, correlative historic data is only useful if we have statistics to compare with other land masses that have dropped below sea level. Was it gradual or over a relatively short period of time (several months or so)? The data above doesn’t tell us much and certainly doesn’t conclude that all is well with the sea rising in Japan.
The land on the east side of the subduction zone sinks, not the west side.