Researchers from the University of Southampton and the Australian National University used geological evidence of the past few million years to derive a background pattern of natural sea-level rise.
This was compared with historical tide-gauge and satellite observations of sea-level change for the 'global warming' period, since the industrial revolution.
"There is no speculation about any new mechanisms that might develop due to human-made global warming. Put simply, we consider purely what nature has done before, and therefore could do again," lead author Professor Eelco Rohling said.
"Historical observations show a rising sea level from about 1800 as sea water warmed up and melt water from glaciers and ice fields flowed into the oceans. Around 2000, sea level was rising by about 3 mm per year. That may sound slow, but it produces a significant change over time," co-author Dr Ivan Haigh added.
"For the first time, we can see that the modern sea-level rise is quite fast by natural standards. Based on our natural background pattern, only about half the observed sea-level rise would be expected," Rohling said.
The study was published in the journal Scientific Reports.
