the position that the surface of seas and oceans would assume if uninfluenced by tides, waves, or swells, measured as the vertical distance between the water surface and a reference point on land. Sea level is classified as instantaneous, tidal, daily mean, monthly mean, annual mean, and long-term mean.
Sea level is constantly changing under the influence of wind disturbances, tides, the heating and cooling of the ocean surface, atmospheric pressure fluctuations, precipitation and evaporation, and river and glacial runoff. Long-term mean sea level, however, is not affected by these factors; it is determined by the distribution of gravity and by the uneven spatial distribution of such hydrometeorological characteristics as water density and atmospheric pressure. Long-term mean sea level, which is constant at any given point, is used as a reference level from which land elevations are measured. In order to determine the depths of seas with minimal tidal variation, long-term mean sea level is taken as zero depth, from which depths are calculated in accordance with navigational requirements.
In the USSR, absolute elevations on the earth’s surface are measured from the long-term mean sea level of the Baltic Sea, which is read off from the zero point of the tide gage at Kronstadt.