Ali, A.1996: Vulnerability of Bangladesh to climate change and sea level rise through tropical cyclones and storm surges. Water, Air and Soil Pollution92, 171-79.
2.
Austin, R.M.1991: Modelling Holocene tides on the north-west European continental shelf. Terra Nova3, 276-88.
3.
Belderson, R.H., Pingree, R.D. and Griffiths, D.K.1986: Low sea-level tidal origin of Celtic Sea sand banks - evidence from numerical modelling of M2 tidal streams. Marine Geology73, 99-108.
4.
Bell, R.G. and Goring, D.G.1996: Techniques for analyzing sea level records around New Zealand. Marine Geodesy19, 77-98.
5.
Bird, E.C.F.1993: Submerging coasts: the effects of a rising sea level on coastal environments. Chichester: Wiley.
6.
Bondesan, M., Castiglioni, G.B., Elmi, C., Gabbianelli, G., Marocco, R., Pirazzoli, P.A. and Tomasin, A.1995: Coastal areas at risk from storm surges and sea-level rise in northeastern Italy. Journal of Coastal Research11, 1354-79.
7.
Chen, J.1996: On the relative vertical movement between crust and sea level along the Chinese coastal zone: a national based research project in China. Marine Geodesy19, 99-104.
8.
Cram, J.M.1979: The influence of continental shelf width on tidal range: paleoceanographic implications. Journal of Geology87, 441-47.
9.
Crawford, W.R.1995: A technique for quality-control and selection of tidal harmonic constituents. International Hydrographic Review72, 135-50.
10.
Davis, J.L. and Mitrovica, J.X.1996: Glacial isostatic adjustment and the anomalous tide gauge record of eastern North America. Nature379, 331-33.
11.
Devoy, R.J.N.1987: Introduction: first principles and the scope of sea-surface studies. In Devoy, R.J.N., editor, Sea surface studies: a global view, London : Croom Helm, 1-30.
12.
Doodson, A.T. and Warburg, H.D.1941: Admiralty manual of tides. London: HMSO.
13.
Douglas, B.C.1995: Global sea level change. In Reviews of geophysics. Supplement. US National Report to the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics1991-1994, 1425-32.
14.
Emery, K.O. and Aubrey, D.G.1991: Sea levels, land levels and tide guages. New York: Springer-Verlag.
15.
Fankhauser, S.1995: Protection vs. retreat: estimating the costs of sea level rise. Environment and Planning A27, 299-319.
16.
Franken, A.F.1987: Rekonstruktie van het paleogetijklimaat in de Noordzee. Report X0029-00. Delft: Delft Hydraulics Laboratory (2 vols).
17.
Gehrels, W.R., Belknap, D.F., Pearce, B.R. and Gong, B.1995: Modeling the contribution of M2 tidal amplification to the Holocene rise of mean high water in the Gulf of Maine and the Bay of Fundy. Marine Geology124, 71-85.
18.
Godin, G.1988: The resonant period of the Bay of Fundy. Continental Shelf Research8, 1005-10.
19.
— 1992a: Possibility of rapid changes in the tide of the Bay of Fundy, based on a scrutiny of the records from Saint John. Continental Shelf Research12, 327-38.
20.
— 1992b: La montée du niveau moyen des mers est-elle la cause de l'augmentation de l'amplitude de l'onde de marée M2 en baie de Fundy? Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences. Série II 314, 1451-56.
21.
- 1994: Confirmation of the trends suspected to be present in the tide of the Bay of Fundy. International Hydrographic Review71, 103-17.
22.
— 1995: Rapid evolution of the tide in the Bay of Fundy. Continental Shelf Research15, 369-72.
23.
Goring, D.G. and Bell, R.G.1996: Distilling information from patchy tide gauge records: the New Zealand experience. Marine Geodesy19, 63-76.
Gomitz, V., Rosenzweig, C. and Hillel, D.1994: Is sea level rising or falling?Nature371, 481.
26.
Grant, D.R.1970: Recent coastal submergence of the Maritime Provinces, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Science7, 676-91.
27.
Greenberg, D.A.1979: A numerical model investigation of tidal phenomena in the Bay of Fundy and Gulf of Maine. Marine Geodesy2, 161-87.
28.
Hinton, A.C.1992: Palaeotidal changes within the area of The Wash during the Holocene. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association103, 259-72.
29.
— 1995: Holocene tides of The Wash, UK: the influence of water-depth and coastline-shape changes on the record of sea-level change. Marine Geology124, 87-111.
30.
Ipcc1990: Climate change: the IPCC scientific assessment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
31.
— 1996a: Climate change 1995: the science of climate change. Contribution of Working Group I to the second assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
32.
— 1996b: Climate change 1995: impacts, adaptations and mitigation of climate change: scientific-technical analyses. Contribution of Working Group II to the second assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
33.
— 1996c: Climate change 1995: economic and social dimensions of climate change. Contribution of Working Group III to the second assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
34.
Jardine, W.G.1975: The determination of former sea levels in areas of large tidal range. In Suggate, R.P. and Cresswell, M.M., editors, Quaternary studies , Wellington: The Royal Society of New Zealand, 163-68.
35.
Jensen, J., Hofstede, J.L.A., Kunz, H., de Ronde, J., Heinen, P.F. and Siefert, W.1993: Long term water level observations and variations . In Hillen, R. and Verhagen, H.J., editors, Coastlines of the southern North Sea, New York: ASCE , 115-35.
36.
Kidson, C.1982: Sea-level changes in the Holocene. Quaternary Science Reviews1, 121-51.
Mitrovica, J.X. and Davis, J.L.1995: Present-day post-glacial sea level change far from late Pleistocene ice sheets: implications for recent tide gauge records. Geophysical Research Letters22, 2529-32.
39.
Mörner, N.-A.1996: Sea level variability. Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie102, 223-32.
40.
Murty, T.S., Lee, D.K. and Roberts, M.C.1989: The influence of delta growth on paleo-tidal flow: Fraser River Delta, British Columbia. Part 2. Tidal model. Marine Geodesy13, 229-43.
41.
Murty, T.S. and Roberts, M.C.1989: The influence of delta growth on paleo-tidal flow: Fraser River Delta, British Columbia. Part 3. Paleo-tidal flows and delta growth . Marine Geodesy13, 285-98.
42.
Murty, T.S. and Saxena, N.K.1987: Paleogeographic maps for computations of paleotides, ocean circulation and climate. Marine Geodesy11, 115-26.
43.
Nerem, R.S.1995a: Global mean sea level variations from TOPEX/POSEIDON altimeter data. Science268, 708-10.
44.
— 1995b: Measuring global mean sea level variations using TOPEX/POSEIDON altimeter data. Journal of Geophysical Research100, 25135-51.
45.
Nicholls, R.J. and Leatherman, S.P., editors, 1995a: The potential impacts of accelerated sea-level rise on developing countries. Journal of Coastal Research, special issue 14.
46.
— 1995b: Sea-level rise and coastal management. In McGregor, D.M. and Thompson, D.A., editors, Geomorphology and land management in a changing environment, Chichester: Wiley.
47.
Peltier, W.R.1995: Global sea level rise and glacial isostatic adjustment: an analysis of data from the east coast of North America. Geophysical Research Letters23, 717-20.
48.
Perez, R.T., Feir, R.B., Carandang, E. and Gonzalez, E.B.1996: Potential impacts of sea level rise on the coastal resources of Manila Bay: a preliminary vulnerability assessment. Water, Air and Soil Pollution92, 137-47.
49.
Pernetta, J.C. and Milliman, J.D., editors, 1995: Land-ocean interactions in the coastal zone: implementation plan. IGBP Report 33. Stockholm: International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme .
50.
Pingree, R.D. and Griffiths, D.K.1979: Sand transport paths around the British Isles resulting from M2 and M4 tidal interactions. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK59, 497-513.
51.
Pirazzoli, P.A.1991: World atlas of Holocene sea-level changes. Elsevier Oceanography Series58. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
52.
— 1996: Sea-level changes: the last 20000 years. Chichester: Wiley.
53.
Plag, H.-P., Austin, W.E.N., Belknap, D.F., Devoy, R.J.N., England, J., Josenhans, H., Peacock, J.D., Petersen, K.S., Rokoengen, K., Scourse, J.D., Smith, D.E. and Wingfield, R.T.R.1996: Late Quaternary relative sea-level changes and the role of glaciation upon continental shelves. Terra Nova8, 213-22.
54.
Preece, R.C., Scourse, J.D., Houghton, S.D., Knudsen, K.L. and Penney, D.N.1990: The Pleistocene sea-level and neotectonic history of the eastern Solent, southern England. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of LondonB328, 425-77.
55.
Proctor, R. and Carter, L.1989: Tidal and sedimentary response to the Late Quaternary closure and opening of Cook Strait, New Zealand: results from numerical modeling . Paleoceanography4, 167-80.
56.
Pugh, D.T.1987: Tides, surges and mean sea-level: a handbook for engineers and scientists. Chichester: Wiley .
57.
Redfield, A.C.1958: The influence of the continental shelf on the tides of the Atlantic coast of the United States. Journal of Marine Research17, 432-48.
58.
Rickards, L.J., Cramer, R.N., Tabor, A.R., Spencer, N.E., Woodworth, P.L. and Jones, M.T.1996: The GLOSS station handbook CD-ROM. Birkenhead: British Oceanographic Data Centre, Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory.
59.
Roberts, M.C. and Murty, T.S.1989: The influence of delta growth on paleo-tidal flow: Fraser River Delta, British Columbia. Part 1. Geological framework and evolution of the delta. Marine Geodesy13,221-28.
60.
Roep, Th.B. and Beets, D.J.1988: Sea-level rise and paleotidal levels from sedimentary structures in the coastal barriers in the western Netherlands since 5600 BP . Geologie en Mijnbouw67, 53-60.
61.
Roep, Th.B., Beets, D.J. and Ruegg, G.H.J.1975: Wave-built structures in sub-recent beach barriers of the Netherlands. In IXme Congrès International de Sedimentologie. Extraits des publications du Congrès, 141-45.
62.
Scott, D.B. and Greenberg, D.A.1983: Relative sea-level rise and tidal development in the Fundy tidal system. Canadian Journal of Earth Science20, 1554-64.
63.
Scourse, J.D. and Austin, R.M.1995: Palaeotidal modelling of continental shelves: marine implications of a land-bridge in the Strait of Dover during the Holocene and Middle Pleistocene . In Preece, R.C., editor, Island Britain: a Quaternary perspective. Geological Society Special Publication 96. London: The Geological Society .
64.
Spaans, W., Booij, N., Praagman, N., Noorman, R. and Lander, J.1989: DUFLOW, a micro-computer package for the simulation of one-dimensional unsteady flow in open channel systems. The Hague: SAMWAT.
65.
Sucsy, P.V., Pearce, B.R. and Panchang, V.G.1993: Comparison of two- and three-dimensional model simulations of the effect of a tidal barrier on the Gulf of Maine tides. Journal ofPhysical Oceanography23, 1231-48.
66.
Titus, J.G. and Narayanan, V.1996: The risk of sea level rise: a Delphic Monte Carlo analysis in which twenty researchers specify subjective probability distributions for model coefficients within their respective areas of expertise. Climatic Change33, 151-212.
67.
Tolkatchev, A.1996: Global sea level observing system (GLOSS). Marine Geodesy19, 21-62.
68.
Tooley, M.J.1985: Sea levels. Progress in PhysicalGeography9, 113-20.
69.
Tsimplis, M.N. and Woodworth, P.L.1994: The global distribution of the seasonal sea level cycle calculated from coastal tide gauge data. Journal of Geophysical Research99, 16031-39.
70.
Turner, R.K. and Adger, W.N.1996: Coastal zone resources assessment guidelines. LOICZ Reports andStudies4. Texel: Land-Ocean Interactions in the Coastal Zone Core Project of the IGBP.
71.
Turner, R.K., Adger, W.N. and Doktor, P.1995: Assessing the economic costs of sea level rise . Environment and Planning A27, 1777-96.
72.
Turner, R.K., Subak, S. and Adger, W.N.1996: Pressures, trends, and impacts in coastal zones: interactions between socioeconomic and natural systems. EnvironmentalManagement20, 159-73.
73.
Van de Plassche, O.1986: Introduction. In van de Plassche, 0., editor, Sea-level research: a manual for the collection and evaluation of data, Norwich: Geo Books, 1-26.
74.
Van der Spek, A.J.F.1994: Large-scale evolution of Holocene tidal basins in The Netherlands. Doctoral thesis, University of Utrecht .
75.
Wagner, C.A., Tai, C.K. and Kuhn, J.M.1995: Temporal variability of global Topex/Poseidon altimetry: tide and annual signals? Bulletin Geodesique69, 244-51.
76.
Wigley, T.M.L.1995: Global-mean temperature and sea level consequences of greenhouse gas concentration stabilization. Geophysical Research Letters22, 45-48.
77.
Woodroffe, C.D.1994: Sea level. Progress in PhysicalGeography18, 436-51.
78.
Woodroffe, C.D. and Nash, D.1995: Sea level. Progress in PhysicalGeography19, 391-98.
79.
Woodworth, P.L.1993: A review of recent sea-level research. Oceanography and Marine Biology Annual Review31, 87-109.
80.
Woodworth, P.L., Vassie, J.M., Hughes, C.W. and Meredith, M.P.1996a: A test of the ability of TOPEX/POSEIDON to monitor flows through the Drake Passage. Journal of Geophysical Research101, 11935-47.
81.
Woodworth, P.L., Vassie, J.M., Spencer, R. and Smith, D.E.1996b: Precise datum control for pressure tide gauges . Marine Geodesy19, 1-20.
82.
Yim, W.W.-S.1996: Vulnerability and adaptation of Hong Kong to hazards under climatic change conditions. Water, Air and Soil Pollution92, 181-90.
83.
Yohe, G., Neumann, J., Marshall, P. and Ameden, H.1996: The economic cost of greenhouse-induced sea-level rise for developed property in the United States. Climatic Change32, 387-410.
84.
Zerbini, S., Plag, H.-P., Baker, T., Becker, M., Billris, H., Bürki, B., Kahle, H.-G., Marson, I., Pezzoli, L., Richter, B., Romagnoli, C., Sztobryn, M., Tomasi, P., Tsimplis, M., Veis, G. and Verrone, G.1996: Sea level in the Mediterranean: a first tep towards separating crustal movements and absolute sea-level variations. Global and Planetary Change14, 1-48.