Lessons from a high CO2 world : an ocean view from ~ 3 million years ago.
Erin L McClymont,Heather L Ford,Sze Ling Ho,Julia Tindall,Alan M. Haywood,Montserrat Alonso-Garcia,Montserrat Alonso-Garcia,Ian Bailey,Melissa A. Berke,Kate Littler,Molly O. Patterson,Benjamin Petrick,Francien Peterse,A. Christina Ravelo,Bjørg Risebrobakken,Stijn De Schepper,George E. A. Swann,Kaustubh Thirumalai,Jessica E. Tierney,Carolien van der Weijst,S. M. White,Ayako Abe-Ouchi,Michiel Baatsen,Esther C. Brady,Wing-Le Chan,Deepak Chandan,Ran Feng,Chuncheng Guo,Anna von der Heydt,Stephen J. Hunter,Xiangyi Li,Xiangyi Li,Gerrit Lohmann,Kerim H. Nisancioglu,Kerim H. Nisancioglu,Kerim H. Nisancioglu,Bette L. Otto-Bliesner,W. Richard Peltier,Christian Stepanek,Zhongshi Zhang,Zhongshi Zhang,Zhongshi Zhang +41 more
TL;DR: This paper examined a single interglacial during the late Pliocene (KM5c, ca. 3.205±0.01 Ma) when atmospheric CO2 exceeded pre-industrial concentrations, but were similar to today and to the lowest emission scenarios for this century.
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Abstract: A range of future climate scenarios are projected for high atmospheric CO2 concentrations, given uncertainties over future human actions as well as potential environmental and climatic feedbacks. The geological record offers an opportunity to understand climate system response to a range of forcings and feedbacks which operate over multiple temporal and spatial scales. Here, we examine a single interglacial during the late Pliocene (KM5c, ca. 3.205±0.01 Ma) when atmospheric CO2 exceeded pre-industrial concentrations, but were similar to today and to the lowest emission scenarios for this century. As orbital forcing and continental configurations were almost identical to today, we are able to focus on equilibrium climate system response to modern and near-future CO2. Using proxy data from 32 sites, we demonstrate that global mean sea-surface temperatures were warmer than pre-industrial values, by ∼2.3 ∘C for the combined proxy data (foraminifera Mg∕Ca and alkenones), or by ∼3.2–3.4 ∘C (alkenones only). Compared to the pre-industrial period, reduced meridional gradients and enhanced warming in the North Atlantic are consistently reconstructed. There is broad agreement between data and models at the global scale, with regional differences reflecting ocean circulation and/or proxy signals. An uneven distribution of proxy data in time and space does, however, add uncertainty to our anomaly calculations. The reconstructed global mean sea-surface temperature anomaly for KM5c is warmer than all but three of the PlioMIP2 model outputs, and the reconstructed North Atlantic data tend to align with the warmest KM5c model values. Our results demonstrate that even under low-CO2 emission scenarios, surface ocean warming may be expected to exceed model projections and will be accentuated in the higher latitudes.
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Atmospheric CO2 over the Past 66 Million Years from Marine Archives
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Simulating Miocene warmth: insights from an opportunistic Multi-Model ensemble (MioMIP1)
Natalie J. Burls,Catherine Bradshaw,Catherine Bradshaw,A. M. de Boer,Nicholas Herold,Matthew Huber,Matthew J. Pound,Yannick Donnadieu,Alexander Farnsworth,A. Frigola,Edward Gasson,A. S. von der Heydt,David K. Hutchinson,Gregor Knorr,Kira T Lawrence,Caroline H Lear,Xiangyu Li,Gerrit Lohmann,Daniel J. Lunt,Alice Marzocchi,Matthias Prange,C. A. Riihimaki,Anta-Clarisse Sarr,Nicholas Siler,Zhongshi Zhang,Zhongshi Zhang +25 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize several Miocene climate modeling efforts together with available terrestrial and ocean surface temperature reconstructions and evaluate the range of model-data agreement, highlight robust mechanisms operating across Miocene modeling efforts and highlight regions where differences across experiments result in a large spread in warming responses.
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The latitudinal temperature gradient and its climate dependence as inferred from foraminiferal δ18O over the past 95 million years
D.E. Gaskell,Matthew Huber,Charlotte L O'Brien,Gordon N. Inglis,R. P. Acosta,Christopher J. Poulsen,Pincelli M. Hull +6 more
TL;DR: The authors show that the latitudinal temperature gradient has exhibited a consistent inverse relationship with global mean sea-surface temperature for at least the past 95 million years, and argue for a fundamental consistency in the dynamics of heat transport and radiative transfer across vastly different background states.
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