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  • 2022-07-20 (xsd:date)
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  • Plymouth Rock pictures don’t prove sea levels are the same as 1620 (en)
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  • Legend has it that, upon arriving in North America, the Pilgrims stepped off the Mayflower onto the large boulder that now sits in a place of prominence on the Plymouth, Massachusetts, waterfront. Plymouth Rock is a well-known tourist attraction, but its connection to early U.S. history is unproven. And despite what some social media users have claimed, the landmark cannot be used to disprove that sea levels are rising. An Instagram user shared a July 17 meme about the rock that read, Plymouth Rock, 2022 still at sea level. On July 12, a Facebook user shared another meme featuring two pictures of Plymouth Rock side by side, one labeled 1620 at sea level and the other 2022 still at sea level. (Screengrab from Facebook.) The posts were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook .) These Plymouth Rock memes do not prove that sea levels remain unchanged; the posts are false and misleading. There’s no evidence the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock There is no evidence the rock proudly displayed under the portico in Plymouth today is the exact place where Pilgrims first disembarked the Mayflower in Plymouth, much less that it was found at sea level. (The Pilgrims first landed in Provincetown, Massachusetts, on Nov. 11, 1620. The Mayflower anchored in Plymouth Harbor a few weeks later.) There are two primary accounts of the Pilgrims’ Plymouth landing, but both simply say that the Pilgrims landed. Neither mentions any rocks in their account of the landing, said Plymouth’s Pilgrim Hall Museum’s website . The first references to Plymouth Rock are found over 100 years after the actual landing. The National Museum of American History site refers to the story of the Pilgrims landing at Plymouth Rock as oral tradition, and said no contemporary accounts of the landing mention a rock. Plymouth’s tourism website said in 1741 an elder identified Plymouth Rock as the exact landing spot. Although the veracity of the elder’s claim is unknown, Plymouth Rock quickly became an American icon, the site added. Visitors stand in a pavilion while looking at Plymouth Rock, in Plymouth, Massachusetts, on Nov. 18, 2018. (AP) The rock hasn’t always been in the same place Once the boulder was identified as Plymouth Rock, its nomadic history began. In 1774, a team attempted to move the rock from shore and place it next to Plymouth’s liberty pole in the town square, said the National Museum of American History. Before it could be removed from the beach, it accidentally broke in two. One part of the rock remained in place; the other piece was moved to the town square. More than 100 years later in 1880, the two pieces were reunited back on the shore and cemented together, the National Museum of American History said . In most images of the rock, it is easy to see where it was fused back together. Pilgrim Hall Museum’s website said 1620 was also cut into Plymouth Rock in 1880. In 1920, the rock was moved again, when Plymouth’s waterfront was redesigned and the shoreline was rebuilt, according to Pilgrim Hall Museum’s site . Sea levels are rising The rock has also been underwater before, during extreme weather and exceptionally high tides called king tides . Plymouth Rock yesterday vs today. pic.twitter.com/rW9Rko4Nkn — MA Sharks 🦈 (@MA_Sharks) March 3, 2018 #KingTide in Plymouth, MA. Pilgrims would have got their feet wet landing on #PlymouthRock today. @ericfisher @Plymouth_400 pic.twitter.com/DxgQQXxu3J — MA Sharks 🦈 (@MA_Sharks) November 15, 2016 Furthermore, experts said the rock is not a useful landmark for measuring sea level changes. Michael Oppenheimer, a Princeton University professor of geosciences and international affairs, said a single, stationary object anchored in bedrock and free of tectonic activity can sometimes be used to measure local sea levels. But all it can indicate is local sea level, not ‘sea levels’ generally or the global mean rise, Oppenheimer said. Local sea level rise can significantly differ from the global mean sea level rise because of land sinking or tectonic activity, he said. Gary Griggs, a University of California, Santa Cruz, professor of earth sciences, said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been tracking sea levels relative to land in Boston, near Plymouth Rock, for 100 years. These records show that sea levels have risen about 11.4 inches in the past century. Satellite data, which has been used to measure sea level rise since 1993, indicates an average rate of global sea level rise of about 13.9 inches per century, Griggs said. That rate is accelerating; over the past decade, the rate has increased to about 19.7 inches per 100 years, he said. This is relatively simple science, and there are no alternate interpretations or facts, Griggs said. Sea-level rise is directly connected to a warming climate. The warmer the planet gets, the more sea water expands, and the more ice melts, all adding to sea level. Oppenheimer also said global mean sea levels are rising annually and that the rise is accelerating. There is no doubt about this, he said. Rising sea levels cause problems, some of which have already begun, Oppenheimer said. So-called nuisance or fair-weather flooding has increased in frequency, meaning that high tides now flood streets on a regular basis along the coast in many states — up to 10 times as frequently as 50 years ago, he said. Furthermore, in large coastal storms, flood risk is increasing as water penetrates inland further and to higher elevation. Our ruling There’s no proof that Plymouth Rock was at sea level when it might have welcomed the Pilgrims in 1620. The rock has also moved several times in the past 400 years and is sometimes submerged during high tides and extreme weather. Experts said that Plymouth Rock is not useful for evaluating sea level changes. That sea levels are rising, however, is undisputed. We rate this claim False. RELATED: What does extreme weather tell us about climate change? RELATED: Fact-checks about climate change (en)
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