New Study: Eastern China Sea Levels Were 2.4 Meters Higher Than Today 6000 Years Ago

Yet another new study affirms sea levels were meters higher than today on the Bohai Sea coast during the Mid-Holocene before declining to today’s levels over the last few millennia.

The Earth was less glaciated at this time, or from 9000 to 4000 years ago, meaning there was less water locked up on land as ice. Consequently, there was more water in ocean basins.

Hundreds of other studies have documented meters-higher at locations throughout the world, as documented here.

Image Source: Tian et al., 2025

4 responses to “New Study: Eastern China Sea Levels Were 2.4 Meters Higher Than Today 6000 Years Ago”

  1. New Study: Eastern China Sea Levels Were 2.4 Meters Higher Than Today 6000 Years Ago – Climate- Science.press

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  2. soundos

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  3. Douglas

    I was in Dubai a few years ago. Studies I read had said the Arabian Sea was 10 km further inland 3,000 years ago. I went a few kilometers West from the Sea and indeed found elevated beach deposits consist with that claim.
    Whether it’s isostatic rebound being slower than ocean level rise (seems reasonable that the cause happens before the effect …), or actual higher sea levels at a global level, it seems obvious from geology that relative sea levels in many places were higher 3000+ years ago. But that goes against the “today’s science is special” narrative, so I expect no agreement from the alarmists.

  4. kamir bouchareb st

    thank you

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