9 research outputs found

    Retreat of the Antarctic Ice Sheet During the Last Interglaciation and Implications for Future Change

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    The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) response to past warming consistent with the 1.5–2°C “safe limit” of the United Nations Paris Agreement is currently not well known. Empirical evidence from the most recent comparable period, the Last Interglaciation, is sparse, and transient ice-sheet experiments are few and inconsistent. Here, we present new, transient, GCM-forced ice-sheet simulations validated against proxy reconstructions. This is the first time such an evaluation has been attempted. Our empirically constrained simulations indicate that the AIS contributed 4 m to global mean sea level by 126 ka BP, with ice lost primarily from the Amundsen, but not Ross or Weddell Sea, sectors. We resolve the conflict between previous work and show that the AIS thinned in the Wilkes Subglacial Basin but did not retreat. We also find that the West AIS may be predisposed to future collapse even in the absence of further environmental change, consistent with previous studies

    Dating Antarctic ice cores using high-temporal resolution black carbon records

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    Black carbon aerosols (BC) emitted by fires in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) are transported to Antarctica and preserved in the Antarctic ice sheet. Recent efforts to develop ice core records of BC deposition to Antarctica show variability in BC over a broad range of time scales. The ~ monthly-resolution BC record from the WAIS divide deep ice core displayed strong seasonal variability in modern sections of the record consistent with the timing of SH biomass burning. The record was subsequently used as an annual layer dating proxy in conjunction with other chemical species. If the emissions and transport of BC to Antarctica are stable over long periods of time it may be useful as an annual layer proxy at sites other than WAIS. To date, a rigorous comparison of Antarctic ice core BC seasonality from different locations have not been conducted. Here we present a comparison of BC ice core data from the top sections of the WAIS divide deep core, the Roosevelt Island RICE core, and the Law Dome DSS1213 core. The RICE and Law Dome sites are separated from WAIS by large distances and experience different atmospheric circulation and climate regimes. A detailed description of the data uncertainties and its use in annual layer counting will be discussed

    A fractal climate response function can simulate global average temperature trends of the modern era and the past millennium

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    <p>A climate response function is introduced that consists of six exponential (low-pass) filters with weights depending as a power law on their e-folding times. The response of this two-parameter function to the combined forcings of solar irradiance, greenhouse gases, and SO2-related aerosols is fitted simultaneously to reconstructed temperatures of the past millennium, the response to solar cycles, the response to the 1991 Pinatubo volcanic eruption, and the modern 1850-2010 temperature trend. Assuming strong long-term modulation of solar irradiance, the quite adequate fit produces a climate response function with a millennium-scale response to doubled CO2 concentration of 2.0 +/- A 0.3 A degrees C (mean +/- A standard error), of which about 50 % is realized with e-folding times of 0.5 and 2 years, about 30 % with e-folding times of 8 and 32 years, and about 20 % with e-folding times of 128 and 512 years. The transient climate response (response after 70 years of 1 % yearly rise of CO2 concentration) is 1.5 +/- A 0.2 A degrees C. The temperature rise from 1820 to 1950 can be attributed for about 70 % to increased solar irradiance, while the temperature changes after 1950 are almost completely produced by the interplay of anthropogenic greenhouse gases and aerosols. The SO2-related forcing produces a small temperature drop in the years 1950-1970 and an inflection of the temperature curve around the year 2000. Fitting with a tenfold smaller modulation of solar irradiance produces a less adequate fit with millennium-scale and transient climate responses of 2.5 +/- A 0.4 and 1.9 +/- A 0.3 A degrees C, respectively.</p>

    A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly

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    Subtropical and extratropical proxy records of wind field, sea level pressure (SLP), temperature and hydrological anomalies from South Africa, Australia/New Zealand, Patagonian South America and Antarctica were used to reconstruct the Indo-Pacific extratropical southern hemisphere sea-level pressure anomaly (SLPa) fields for the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA ~700–1350 CE) and transition to the Little Ice Age (LIA 1350–1450 CE). The multivariate array of proxy data were simultaneously evaluated against global climate model output in order to identify climate state analogues that are most consistent with the majority of proxy data. The mean SLP and SLP anomaly patterns derived from these analogues illustrate the evolution of low frequency changes in the extratropics. The Indo-Pacific extratropical mean climate state was dominated by a strong tropical interaction with Antarctica emanating from: (1) the eastern Indian and south-west Pacific regions prior to 1100 CE, then, (2) the eastern Pacific evolving to the central Pacific La Niña-like pattern interacting with a +ve SAM to 1300 CE. A relatively abrupt shift to –ve SAM and the central Pacific El Niño-like pattern occurred at ~1300. A poleward (equatorward) shift in the subtropical ridge occurred during the MCA (MCA–LIA transition). The Hadley Cell expansion in the Australian and Southwest Pacific, region together with the poleward shift of the zonal westerlies is contemporaneous with previously reported Hadley Cell expansion in the North Pacific and Atlantic regions, and suggests that bipolar climate symmetry was a feature of the MCA.Ian D. Goodwin, Stuart Browning, Andrew M. Lorrey, Paul A. Mayewski, Steven J. Phipps, Nancy A. N. Bertler, Ross P. Edwards, Tim J. Cohen, Tas van Ommen, Mark Curran, Cameron Barr, J. Curt Stage
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