Nov 4, 2024
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I know some of my theories are impossible however I like to post them to make more brain activity.

This is a theory about the 6 inch increase in sea level in 100 years and 20 inch increase in 1000 years

My theory is that if sea levels are remaining relatively the same then rain water will not increase ocean water levels.

This theory could be useful in finding a planet with an ocean.

I believe that the ocean is exerting the same amount of pressure no matter what due to the deepest parts exerting so much force and plates move away from each other in geologic terms tectonic plates. When the ocean is forcing the plates away it is the same push all the time where the ground moves to keep sea levels at the point of equilibrium of water an earth balancing in the heated magma flows.

What could cause this 6 inch increase besides global warming. I believe building giant cities on coastal plates will have little impact but I imagine if you move mountains of buildings to the coast there may be short or long term effect.

The polar ice cap melted and not much flooding happened

To sum up this theory I believe the ocean water is exerting the same amount of force on the magma flow causing seal levels to remain the same. I’m having trouble verbalizing it. But ocean levels remain the same because it is balanced with the land pushing the same amount of weight.

This was a mess but it’s new and I thought I’d share my thoughts. Any geology experts would probably know exactly what I’m talking about.
 
We have four water reservoirs….. oceans/icecaps, atmosphere, soil, and plant/animal life. If the surface area of the oceans increase, evaporation will increase. And the other three reservoirs will increase too.

The melting ice goes to many other places than just the ocean. Be wary of prediction.

If the sea ice level has oscillations, then the sea level should have oscillation too. But much weaker.

Oscillations make the trend. Delaying and slowing the trend. Slowing the change is automatic.

Just an observation and supposition from it. I haven’t measured it.
 
Nov 4, 2024
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11
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I do find it interesting because I remember as a student my science teacher was saying levels could rise and I’m theorizing that the ocean levels are stable

Let’s theorize the ocean is a giant pool with magma below it now when an elephant gets in the pool water levels would typically rise. However due to the magma bottom and equilibrium weight magma is pushed out a volcano outside of the pool so water levels do not rise.
 

Catastrophe

"Science begets knowledge, opinion ignorance.
"I know some of my theories are impossible however I like to post them to make more brain activity.

This is a theory about the 6 inch increase in sea level in 100 years and 20 inch increase in 1000 years

My theory is that if sea levels are remaining relatively the same then rain water will not increase ocean water levels.

This theory could be useful in finding a planet with an ocean.

I believe that the ocean is exerting the same amount of pressure no matter what due to the deepest parts exerting so much force and plates move away from each other in geologic terms tectonic plates. When the ocean is forcing the plates away it is the same push all the time where the ground moves to keep sea levels at the point of equilibrium of water an earth balancing in the heated magma flows.

What could cause this 6 inch increase besides global warming. I believe building giant cities on coastal plates will have little impact but I imagine if you move mountains of buildings to the coast there may be short or long term effect.

The polar ice cap melted and not much flooding happened

To sum up this theory I believe the ocean water is exerting the same amount of force on the magma flow causing seal levels to remain the same. I’m having trouble verbalizing it. But ocean levels remain the same because it is balanced with the land pushing the same amount of weight.

This was a mess but it’s new and I thought I’d share my thoughts. Any geology experts would probably know exactly what I’m talking about."

You state:

My theory is that if sea levels are remaining relatively the same then rain water will not increase ocean water levels.

That is not a theory. It is incorrect wordplay.

It is like saying:

If cold is hot, then cold is hot.

or

If I imagine that I am a millionaire, I can go and spend it.

You also assume that water is as dense as magma. Water density is 1 gm/cc.. Google gives:

The density of magma generally ranges from around 2.2 to 2.9 grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm³) or 2200 to 2900 kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m³), with basaltic magmas being denser than andesitic or rhyolitic magmas.

On this argument, an increase in air pressure could displace magma.
There are levels to be taken into account.
Small differences do not produce large effects in such cases.

"The map is not the territory". "Words are not the realities they purport to describe".

Cat :)
 

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