Of course. And indeed as ice melts, and the weight of that ice is removed from the surface, the crust rebounds to a degree. Not much, since rock is considerably denser than water. And not quickly; it takes millennia to change the shapes of continents. But that does happen.
That's not true at all. 15,000 years ago, as the last ice age was ending, sea level was 240 feet lower than it is now. You can find evidence of that all over the planet. As the ice melted, and the last ice age ended, seas rose to their current levels. This is because all that water was locked up in ice, and when it was released, sea level rose.
It is why global sea levels have never changed significantly since the planet was born
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