Global sea-level rise in the early Holocene revealed from North Sea peats

Marc P. Hijma*, Sarah L. Bradley, Kim M. Cohen, Wouter van der Wal, Natasha L. M. Barlow, Bas Blank, Manfred Frechen, Rick Hennekam, Sytze van Heteren, Patrick Kiden, Antonis Mavritsakis, Bart M. L. Meijninger, Gert-Jan Reichart, Lutz Reinhardt, Kenneth F. Rijsdijk, Annemiek Vink, Freek S. Busschers

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Rates of relative sea-level rise during the final stage of the last deglaciation, the early Holocene, are key to understanding future ice melt and sea-level change under a warming climate1. Data about these rates are scarce2, and this limits insight into the relative contributions of the North American and Antarctic ice sheets to global sea-level rise during the early Holocene. Here we present an early Holocene sea-level curve based on 88 sea-level data points (13.7–6.2 thousand years ago (ka)) from the North Sea (Doggerland3,4). After removing the pattern of regional glacial isostatic adjustment caused by the melting of the Eurasian Ice Sheet, the residual sea-level signal highlights two phases of accelerated sea-level rise. Meltwater sourced from the North American and Antarctic ice sheets drove these two phases, peaking around 10.3 ka and 8.3 ka with rates between 8 mm yr−1 and 9 mm yr−1. Our results also show that global mean sea-level rise between 11 ka and 3 ka amounted to 37.7 m (2σ range, 29.3–42.2 m), reconciling the mismatch that existed between estimates of global mean sea-level rise based on ice-sheet reconstructions and previously limited early Holocene sea-level data. With its broad spatiotemporal coverage, the North Sea dataset provides critical constraints on the patterns and rates of the late-stage deglaciation of the North American and Antarctic ice sheets, improving our understanding of the Earth-system response to climate change.
Original languageEnglish
Article number106223
Pages (from-to)652-657
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume639
Issue number8055
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Mar 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.

Funding

We thank the crews of all the research cruises that we participated in when collecting the offshore samples; N. van Asch for macrofossil analysis of the cores collected with RV Pelagia; N. Janssen and S. de Vries for the description of the cores taken with RV Pelagia; and the Dutch Cultural Heritage Agency (Bj\u00F8rn Smit) for\u00A0discussion and financial support.

FundersFunder number
Dutch Cultural Heritage Agency

    Keywords

    • Cryospheric science
    • Geology
    • Global mean sea level
    • North Sea
    • Sea level changes
    • Sedimentology
    • Tectonics

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