Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)

Rapid changes in the Arctic climate system that occurred in the relatively recent past can be compared with the output of climate models to improve the understanding of the processes responsible for nonlinear system change. In particular, this study focuses on the transition between the Holocene the...

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Main Author: Raymond Bradley
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:70c944e3-03b2-4c1b-9da8-3f7048432d73
id dataone:urn:uuid:70c944e3-03b2-4c1b-9da8-3f7048432d73
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:70c944e3-03b2-4c1b-9da8-3f7048432d73 2024-06-03T18:46:33+00:00 Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354) Raymond Bradley ENVELOPE(-38.0,-36.0,66.0,64.0) BEGINDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2012-12-31T00:00:00Z 2013-06-03T15:54:53Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:70c944e3-03b2-4c1b-9da8-3f7048432d73 unknown Arctic Data Center EARTH SCIENCE > PALEOCLIMATE > LAND RECORDS > BOREHOLES MANNED FIELD STATION Dataset 2013 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:06:07Z Rapid changes in the Arctic climate system that occurred in the relatively recent past can be compared with the output of climate models to improve the understanding of the processes responsible for nonlinear system change. In particular, this study focuses on the transition between the Holocene thermal maximum (HTM) and the onset of Neoglaciation, and on the step-like changes that occurred subsequently during the late Holocene. The millennial-scale cooling trend that followed the HTM coincides with the decrease in Northern Hemisphere summer insolation driven by slow changes in Earth's orbit. Despite the nearly linear forcing, the transition from the HTM to the Little Ice Age (1500-1900 AD) was neither gradual nor uniform. To understand how feedbacks and perturbations result in rapid changes, a geographically distributed network of proxy climate records was examined to study the spatial and temporal patterns of change, and to quantify the magnitude of change during these transitions. During the HTM, summer sea-ice cover over the Arctic Ocean was likely the smallest of the present interglacial period; certainly it was less extensive than at any time in the past 100 years, and therefore affords an opportunity to investigate a period of warmth similar to what is projected during the coming century. This study focuses on lakes because lakes are the most widely distributed sources of proxy climate records that consistently extend through the post-glacial interval. Because climate change is amplified in the Arctic, the climate signal preserved in Arctic lake sediments should be stronger than elsewhere. Confidence in the paleoclimate reconstructions was bolstered by a multi-proxy approach, and by replicate lake records to distinguish basin-scale thresholds from regional-scale climate shifts. The results we provide are part of a collaborative project (with ~10 other PIs) who all used lacustrine sediments to produce new high-resolution proxy climate records of the past 8000 years. The study sites we focused on were in southeastern Greenland, where four lakes were studied. Sediment cores were recovered, dated and analyzed for organic and inorganic content. Each data set was then interpreted in terms of past environmental changes that the sediments recorded. This project contributes to an understanding of climatic variability, a key challenge facing society. Specifically, it provides insights into the feedback processes that cause the climate system in the Arctic to change faster than any other region on Earth. The spatial network of paleoclimate reconstructions serves as key benchmarks for validating climate models and for improving their ability to accurately simulate nonlinear change, including changes in sea-ice cover. Sponsor: University of Massachusetts Amherst, Research Administration Building, Amherst, MA NSF Program: ARCSS Dataset Arctic Arctic Ocean Climate change Greenland Sea ice Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Arctic Lake ENVELOPE(-130.826,-130.826,57.231,57.231) Arctic Ocean Four Lakes ENVELOPE(-126.826,-126.826,54.858,54.858) Greenland ENVELOPE(-38.0,-36.0,66.0,64.0)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic EARTH SCIENCE > PALEOCLIMATE > LAND RECORDS > BOREHOLES
MANNED FIELD STATION
spellingShingle EARTH SCIENCE > PALEOCLIMATE > LAND RECORDS > BOREHOLES
MANNED FIELD STATION
Raymond Bradley
Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
topic_facet EARTH SCIENCE > PALEOCLIMATE > LAND RECORDS > BOREHOLES
MANNED FIELD STATION
description Rapid changes in the Arctic climate system that occurred in the relatively recent past can be compared with the output of climate models to improve the understanding of the processes responsible for nonlinear system change. In particular, this study focuses on the transition between the Holocene thermal maximum (HTM) and the onset of Neoglaciation, and on the step-like changes that occurred subsequently during the late Holocene. The millennial-scale cooling trend that followed the HTM coincides with the decrease in Northern Hemisphere summer insolation driven by slow changes in Earth's orbit. Despite the nearly linear forcing, the transition from the HTM to the Little Ice Age (1500-1900 AD) was neither gradual nor uniform. To understand how feedbacks and perturbations result in rapid changes, a geographically distributed network of proxy climate records was examined to study the spatial and temporal patterns of change, and to quantify the magnitude of change during these transitions. During the HTM, summer sea-ice cover over the Arctic Ocean was likely the smallest of the present interglacial period; certainly it was less extensive than at any time in the past 100 years, and therefore affords an opportunity to investigate a period of warmth similar to what is projected during the coming century. This study focuses on lakes because lakes are the most widely distributed sources of proxy climate records that consistently extend through the post-glacial interval. Because climate change is amplified in the Arctic, the climate signal preserved in Arctic lake sediments should be stronger than elsewhere. Confidence in the paleoclimate reconstructions was bolstered by a multi-proxy approach, and by replicate lake records to distinguish basin-scale thresholds from regional-scale climate shifts. The results we provide are part of a collaborative project (with ~10 other PIs) who all used lacustrine sediments to produce new high-resolution proxy climate records of the past 8000 years. The study sites we focused on were in southeastern Greenland, where four lakes were studied. Sediment cores were recovered, dated and analyzed for organic and inorganic content. Each data set was then interpreted in terms of past environmental changes that the sediments recorded. This project contributes to an understanding of climatic variability, a key challenge facing society. Specifically, it provides insights into the feedback processes that cause the climate system in the Arctic to change faster than any other region on Earth. The spatial network of paleoclimate reconstructions serves as key benchmarks for validating climate models and for improving their ability to accurately simulate nonlinear change, including changes in sea-ice cover. Sponsor: University of Massachusetts Amherst, Research Administration Building, Amherst, MA NSF Program: ARCSS
format Dataset
author Raymond Bradley
author_facet Raymond Bradley
author_sort Raymond Bradley
title Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
title_short Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
title_full Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
title_fullStr Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Research: Nonlinearities in the Arctic climate system during the Holocene (Award #0909354)
title_sort collaborative research: nonlinearities in the arctic climate system during the holocene (award #0909354)
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2013
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:70c944e3-03b2-4c1b-9da8-3f7048432d73
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-38.0,-36.0,66.0,64.0)
BEGINDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2012-12-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.826,-130.826,57.231,57.231)
ENVELOPE(-126.826,-126.826,54.858,54.858)
ENVELOPE(-38.0,-36.0,66.0,64.0)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Lake
Arctic Ocean
Four Lakes
Greenland
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Lake
Arctic Ocean
Four Lakes
Greenland
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Greenland
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Greenland
Sea ice
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