Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations

Absolute sea-level rise has become an important topic globally due to climate change. In addition, relative sea-level rise due to the vertical land motion in coastal areas can have a big societal impact. Vertical land motion (VLM) in Southeast Asia includes a tectonically induced component: uplift a...

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Published in:Remote Sensing
Main Author: Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149255984&doi=10.3390%2frs15041113&partnerID=40&md5=15b8302057f58152e129f48e86fe8359
id 2-s2.0-85149255984
spelling 2-s2.0-85149255984
Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
2023
Remote Sensing
15
4
10.3390/rs15041113
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149255984&doi=10.3390%2frs15041113&partnerID=40&md5=15b8302057f58152e129f48e86fe8359
Absolute sea-level rise has become an important topic globally due to climate change. In addition, relative sea-level rise due to the vertical land motion in coastal areas can have a big societal impact. Vertical land motion (VLM) in Southeast Asia includes a tectonically induced component: uplift and subsidence in plate boundary zones where both Peninsular and East Malaysia are located. In this paper, the relative sea-level trends and (seismic cycle-induced) temporal changes across Malaysia were investigated. To do so, the data (1984–2019) from 21 tide gauges were analyzed, along with a subset (1994–2021) of nearby Malaysian GNSS stations. Changes in absolute sea level (ASL) at these locations (1992–2021) were also estimated from satellite altimetry data. As a first for Peninsular and East Malaysia, the combination ASL minus VLM was robustly used to validate relative sea-level rise from tide-gauge data and provide relative sea-level trend estimates based on a common data period of 25+ years. A good match between both the remote and in situ sea-level rise estimations was observed, especially for Peninsular Malaysia (differences < 1 mm/year), when split trends were estimated from the tide gauges and GNSS time series to distinguish between the different VLM regimes that exist due to the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman megathrust earthquake. As in the south of Thailand, post-seismic-induced negative VLM has increased relative sea-level rise by 2–3 mm/year along the Andaman Sea and Malacca Strait coastlines since 2005. For East Malaysia, the validation shows higher differences (bias of 2–3 mm/year), but this poorer match is significantly improved by either not including data after 1 January 2014 or applying a generic jump to all East Malay tide gauges from that date onwards. Overall, the present relative sea-level trends range from 4 to 6 mm/year for Malaysia with a few regions showing up to 9 mm/year due to human-induced land subsidence. © 2023 by the authors.
MDPI
20724292
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
spellingShingle Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
author_facet Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
author_sort Simons W.; Naeije M.; Ghazali Z.; Rahman W.D.; Cob S.; Kadir M.; Mustafar A.; Din A.H.; Efendi J.; Noppradit P.
title Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
title_short Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
title_full Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
title_fullStr Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
title_full_unstemmed Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
title_sort Relative Sea Level Trends for the Coastal Areas of Peninsular and East Malaysia Based on Remote and In Situ Observations
publishDate 2023
container_title Remote Sensing
container_volume 15
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.3390/rs15041113
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149255984&doi=10.3390%2frs15041113&partnerID=40&md5=15b8302057f58152e129f48e86fe8359
description Absolute sea-level rise has become an important topic globally due to climate change. In addition, relative sea-level rise due to the vertical land motion in coastal areas can have a big societal impact. Vertical land motion (VLM) in Southeast Asia includes a tectonically induced component: uplift and subsidence in plate boundary zones where both Peninsular and East Malaysia are located. In this paper, the relative sea-level trends and (seismic cycle-induced) temporal changes across Malaysia were investigated. To do so, the data (1984–2019) from 21 tide gauges were analyzed, along with a subset (1994–2021) of nearby Malaysian GNSS stations. Changes in absolute sea level (ASL) at these locations (1992–2021) were also estimated from satellite altimetry data. As a first for Peninsular and East Malaysia, the combination ASL minus VLM was robustly used to validate relative sea-level rise from tide-gauge data and provide relative sea-level trend estimates based on a common data period of 25+ years. A good match between both the remote and in situ sea-level rise estimations was observed, especially for Peninsular Malaysia (differences < 1 mm/year), when split trends were estimated from the tide gauges and GNSS time series to distinguish between the different VLM regimes that exist due to the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman megathrust earthquake. As in the south of Thailand, post-seismic-induced negative VLM has increased relative sea-level rise by 2–3 mm/year along the Andaman Sea and Malacca Strait coastlines since 2005. For East Malaysia, the validation shows higher differences (bias of 2–3 mm/year), but this poorer match is significantly improved by either not including data after 1 January 2014 or applying a generic jump to all East Malay tide gauges from that date onwards. Overall, the present relative sea-level trends range from 4 to 6 mm/year for Malaysia with a few regions showing up to 9 mm/year due to human-induced land subsidence. © 2023 by the authors.
publisher MDPI
issn 20724292
language English
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accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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