Anthropogenic impact on global geodynamics due to reservoir water impoundment

1995 Geophysical Research Letters 82 citations

Abstract

Water impounded in artificial reservoirs since ∼1950 is by far the largest anthropogenic hydrological change in terms of the mass involved. This mass redistribution contributes to geodynamic changes in the Earth's rotation and gravitational field that have been closely monitored by modern space geodetic techniques. We compute the effect of 88 major reservoirs on length‐of‐day, polar motion, and low‐degree gravitational coefficients. On an individual basis much smaller than geophysical signals in scale and magnitude, these anthropogenic effects prove to be non‐negligible cumulatively, especially when considering the fact that our results represent underestimates of the reality. In particular, reservoir water has contributed a significant fraction in the total observed polar drift over the last 40 years.

Keywords

Polar motionGeodetic datumWater massGeodynamicsGeologyEarth's rotationGravitational fieldGeophysicsPolarEnvironmental scienceEarth scienceGeodesyOceanographySeismologyPhysics

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
24
Pages
3529-3532
Citations
82
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Benjamin F. Chao (1995). Anthropogenic impact on global geodynamics due to reservoir water impoundment. Geophysical Research Letters , 22 (24) , 3529-3532. https://doi.org/10.1029/95gl02664

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DOI
10.1029/95gl02664