Introduction
A very brief history of sea level:
Over the last 140,000 years sea level has varied over a range of more than 120 metres. The most recent large change was an increase of more than 120 metres as the last ice age ended
Sea level stabilised over the last few thousand years, and there was little change between about 1AD and 1800AD
Sea level began to rise again in the 19th century and accelerated again in the early 20th century
Satellite altimeter measurements show a rate of sea-level rise of about 3 mm/year since the early 1990s - a further increase in the rate
Do you even look at the links you provide?
The first graph shows sea levels 120,000 years ago equal to what we have now. Those SUVs now have the power to time travel I guess.
The second graph, with the scary red hockey stick is a quadratic fit to tide gauge estimates. It's a freakin' best fit to an estimate. For someone that likes to admonish people that the argument is settled, that's some pretty weak sauce.
The best thing about this site is there is no mention of the above adjustment.
Here's a link to OBSERVED sea levels. They also show where the adjustments were made to help further the AGW argument:
***.21stcenturysciencetech.com/Articles_2011/Winter-2010/Morner.pdf*** (can't post links)
It's hilarious. The AGW crowd is once again placing all their marbles in another theoretical "hockey stick model". If you need a theoretical model, it's nowhere near settled.
Climate change - always has, always will