Why the U.S. East Coast could be a major ‘hotspot’ for rising seas
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/02/01/why-the-u-s-east-coast-could-be-a-major-hotspot-for-sea-level-rise/
And the simulation found that at high emissions scenarios similar to current rates, the Atlantic sea levels rise considerably faster than the Pacific, with particularly noteworthy impacts for the U.S. East Coast. (Other recent research by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey has suggested this increased rate of sea level rise is already happening finding sea level rise rates ~ 34 times higher than the global average along a large stretch of the U.S. East Coast, which the researchers dubbed a sea level rise hotspot.)
The reason for the difference, the researchers say, is that the Atlantic, more than the Pacific, is characterized by a strong overturning ocean circulation technically known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC that spans the north-south length of the globe and ultimately connects waters off New York with those at the tip of Antarctica. This means that waters circulate through the entire Atlantic much faster than they do throughout the Pacific: A parcel of water that sinks beneath the surface in the Atlantic will generally make it back to the surface again in 200 to 300 years, versus about three times as long for the Pacific, Krasting explains.
For this reason, scientists sometimes say that Atlantic waters are younger than Pacific waters.