Yeah, there is that. Parts of the Earth are still rebounding from the loss of glacial weight at the end of the last ice age, too. Local apparent sea level can be affected by either the actual rise or fall of water (as in the North Atlantic example), or by the rise and fall of the land itself.StACase wrote:Well there's this:And ...[sea level]... has been rising faster in the mid-Atlantic because the land here is sinking.
However, "sea level" is measured against a static reference, usually a mathematical geoid modeling the shape of the Earth. Changes in sea level can occur against this reference from a number of causes, and can be different in different areas (that is, there is no single "sea level"). Changes in coastal land elevation create an apparent change in sea level, but I don't think it would be called a sea level change.