EarthDate
We often hear that sea level is rising, but less often that cities are sinking—which may put them in more jeopardy. This may be caused by land rebounding from the last ice age, when it was covered by ice sheets. While some areas spring upward, others that were pushed upward around the periphery of ice sheets are slowly sinking. Or, Earth's surface may rise or fall when a fault slips, or tectonic plates subduct under or slide over other plates. Rivers move sediment to deltas where, over many years, they may accumulate so much weight they depress Earth’s crust. Normally, floods carry new sediment to replenish the sinking land, but human flood control measures, like levees, distort that. Our large cities, made of concrete and steel, can become so heavy that they start to sink. But the removal of fluids from the subsurface turns out to be the leading reason that land around cities subsides. Scientists surveyed 100 coastal cities and found that a third of them were sinking more than half an inch a year—mostly because of groundwater extraction. The fastest sinking city is the Indonesian capital of Jakarta; some neighborhoods are subsiding almost one foot per year. By comparison, global sea level is rising about an eighth of an inch a year. But the combination of sinking land and rising seas makes some coastal cities quite vulnerable.
300 episoder
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