Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps

The goal of this proposal is to provide a millennial context for current warming and to better constrain the nature of abrupt climate changes over the past 5000 years in the North Atlantic sector of the Arctic. This goal will be addressed with the powerful datasets derived from radiocarbon-dated veg...

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Main Author: Jason Briner
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N
id dataone:doi:10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N
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spelling dataone:doi:10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N 2024-06-03T18:46:38+00:00 Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps Jason Briner Disko, Nuussuaq, Uummannaq, Western Greenland ENVELOPE(-55.5,-50.9667,71.25,69.25) BEGINDATE: 2013-06-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-06-01T00:00:00Z 2017-02-21T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N unknown Arctic Data Center Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N 2024-06-03T18:16:24Z The goal of this proposal is to provide a millennial context for current warming and to better constrain the nature of abrupt climate changes over the past 5000 years in the North Atlantic sector of the Arctic. This goal will be addressed with the powerful datasets derived from radiocarbon-dated vegetation preserved beneath ice caps for centuries to millennia, but now being exposed annually by current ice-margin retreat across northeastern Canada and West Greenland. These chronologies define the pattern and timing of abrupt summer coolings in the recent past and place current warming in a millennial context. 14C dating of vegetation will be complemented by measuring in situ 14C inventories in recently exposed rock surfaces, providing essential temporal constraints on the duration of ice-covered and ice-free conditions throughout the Holocene. Combined, these two datasets will provide the most secure evidence for the character of current summer warming by explicitly dating when the region was last as warm as present. Comparing our climate reconstructions with on-going studies in NW Europe will help to separate the roles of unforced variability from hemispherically symmetric forcing as causes for abrupt climate change. Research activities under this award will be made accessible to indigenous peoples by translating the goals and eventual results into Inuktitut, through posters that describe the research, and by offering public lectures in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut, and at Qikiqtarjuaq, where INSTAAR has long had a presence. This research program will train a PhD and MSc student, and provides opportunities for undergraduate students to become involved with research, building on successful traditions from previous years. Dataset Arctic Climate change Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps Greenland inuktitut Iqaluit North Atlantic Nunavut Nuussuaq Qikiqtarjuaq Uummannaq Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Nunavut Canada Greenland Nuussuaq ENVELOPE(-51.918,-51.918,66.626,66.626) Qikiqtarjuaq ENVELOPE(-64.029,-64.029,67.557,67.557) ENVELOPE(-55.5,-50.9667,71.25,69.25)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
description The goal of this proposal is to provide a millennial context for current warming and to better constrain the nature of abrupt climate changes over the past 5000 years in the North Atlantic sector of the Arctic. This goal will be addressed with the powerful datasets derived from radiocarbon-dated vegetation preserved beneath ice caps for centuries to millennia, but now being exposed annually by current ice-margin retreat across northeastern Canada and West Greenland. These chronologies define the pattern and timing of abrupt summer coolings in the recent past and place current warming in a millennial context. 14C dating of vegetation will be complemented by measuring in situ 14C inventories in recently exposed rock surfaces, providing essential temporal constraints on the duration of ice-covered and ice-free conditions throughout the Holocene. Combined, these two datasets will provide the most secure evidence for the character of current summer warming by explicitly dating when the region was last as warm as present. Comparing our climate reconstructions with on-going studies in NW Europe will help to separate the roles of unforced variability from hemispherically symmetric forcing as causes for abrupt climate change. Research activities under this award will be made accessible to indigenous peoples by translating the goals and eventual results into Inuktitut, through posters that describe the research, and by offering public lectures in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut, and at Qikiqtarjuaq, where INSTAAR has long had a presence. This research program will train a PhD and MSc student, and provides opportunities for undergraduate students to become involved with research, building on successful traditions from previous years.
format Dataset
author Jason Briner
spellingShingle Jason Briner
Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
author_facet Jason Briner
author_sort Jason Briner
title Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
title_short Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
title_full Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
title_fullStr Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
title_sort collaborative research: arctic sensitivity to climate perturbations and a millennial perspective on current warming derived from shrinking ice caps
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N
op_coverage Disko, Nuussuaq, Uummannaq, Western Greenland
ENVELOPE(-55.5,-50.9667,71.25,69.25)
BEGINDATE: 2013-06-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-06-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-51.918,-51.918,66.626,66.626)
ENVELOPE(-64.029,-64.029,67.557,67.557)
ENVELOPE(-55.5,-50.9667,71.25,69.25)
geographic Arctic
Nunavut
Canada
Greenland
Nuussuaq
Qikiqtarjuaq
geographic_facet Arctic
Nunavut
Canada
Greenland
Nuussuaq
Qikiqtarjuaq
genre Arctic
Climate change
Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
Greenland
inuktitut
Iqaluit
North Atlantic
Nunavut
Nuussuaq
Qikiqtarjuaq
Uummannaq
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Collaborative Research: Arctic Sensitivity to Climate Perturbations and a Millennial Perspective on Current Warming Derived from Shrinking Ice Caps
Greenland
inuktitut
Iqaluit
North Atlantic
Nunavut
Nuussuaq
Qikiqtarjuaq
Uummannaq
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/A2NP1WJ7N
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