PassedOut, on 2015-November-03, 14:23, said:
The 85 years is cherry-picked because 1930 represents the extreme low point following a deceleration in sea level rise caused by a period of unusual global cooling. Sea level rise is strongly correlated with global warming.
When you intentionally pick a starting point at an extreme value instead of a normal value, you intentionally skew your results. That is cherry-picking. 1930 is definitely not a year to use as an honest starting point.
Going back 10,000 years would be senseless because the industrial revolution only started a couple of hundred years ago. The long-term trend starts with the industrial revolution.
That conclusion discusses those specific dates because they were used improperly in the paper by Houston and Dean to dispute the fact that the rise in sea level is accelerating. Neither date is any good for that purpose.
And, of course, I never said anything of the kind. Millimeters are millimeters no matter how they are measured.
Although the satellite measurements are more accurate and more comprehensive, they were not available in the 1880s. But tide gauges are accurate enough that we can be sure that the yearly rise in sea level back then was nowhere close to 3mm.
I think you are confusing cherry-picking data with conclusions based on the data. The link I provided state the following:
1. "We use 1277 tide gauge records since 1807 to provide an improved global sea level reconstruction and analyse the evolution of sea level trend and acceleration. GSL12
shows a linear trend of 1.9 ± 0.3 mm·yr−1 during the 20th century and 1.8 ± 0.5 mm·yr−1 for the period 1970–2008."
2. "In this paper we address the development of the regional and global nonlinear sea level trends over the full length of tide- gauge records, however as pre-20th century records are sparse and geographically very limited, we focus on the 20th century. However, we show that over the last 100 years the rate of 2.5 ± 1.0 mm/yr occurred between 1920 and 1945, is likely to be as large as the 1990s, and resulted in a mean sea level rise of 48 mm"
3. "We consider four observational time series of GMSLR, all obtained by analysis of the worldwide dataset of tide gauge (TG) records collated by the Permanent Service for Mean Sea Level [1880-2010]. The reconstructions account for the observation that the rate of GMSLR was not much larger during the last 50 years than during the twentieth century as a whole, despite the increasing anthropogenic forcing."
4. "the tide gauge records referred to in this paper come from the Permanent Service for mean sea level (PSMSL, Woodworth and Player, 2003, [1880-2010]). the sets display evidence for a positive acceleration, or ‘inflexion’, around 1920–1930 and a negative one around 1960. These inflexions are the main contributors to reported accelerations since the late 19th century, and to decelerations during the mid- to late 20th century."
5. "The global sea-level reconstruction of Church and White (2006) shows a small deceleration since 1930" This is the paper that Hrothgar used to refute. Church and White also state, "little evidence has been found in individual tide gauge records for an ongoing positive acceleration of the sort suggested for the 20th century by climate models."
All these papers showed no acceleration over the past 90 years or so. These conclusions are the same whether the start date was 1930, 1880, or 1807. Those papers using older data did show acceleration up until around 1930. Claiming that they show acceleration over the past two centuries is basically true, but misleading, because all the acceleration occurred in the early portion of the data sets.
One cannot compare satellite measurements to tide gauges, because they are not performing the same measurement.