'Ghost Forests' Appear As Rising Seas Kill Trees

Atlantic white cedars on Bass River
Atlantic white cedars dying near the banks of the Bass River in New Jersey.
(Image credit: Ted Blanco, Climate Central)

OCEAN COUNTY, N.J. — Jennifer Walker stepped off her kayak into a wall of riverside grass. She steadied herself and stooped to scoop soil into a jar, then disappeared into the thicket for more. Analysis of amoeba fossils in the researcher's samples may help to explain why, jutting above the head-high marsh grass a couple hundred feet further back, cedar forest was dead.

Bare trunks of dead coastal forests are being discovered up and down the mid-Atlantic coastline, killed by the advance of rising seas. The "ghost forests," as scientists call them, offer eerie evidence of some of the world's fastest rates of sea level rise.

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