Model output presented in the manuscript “Ocean circulation drifts in multi-millennial climate simulations: the role of salinity corrections and climate feedbacks” by Dentith et al. (2018)

Output from the FAMOUS General Circulation Model presented in the study by Dentith et al. (2018) “Ocean circulation drifts in multi-millennial climate simulations: the role of salinity corrections and climate feedbacks”. The following ocean variables are included at model resolution (2.5 ° x 3.75 °)...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jennifer Dentith, University Of Leeds
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: British Geological Survey 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5285/fce574c4-1a57-4559-9190-d20de085e55e
http://www.bgs.ac.uk/services/ngdc/citedData/catalogue/fce574c4-1a57-4559-9190-d20de085e55e.html
Description
Summary:Output from the FAMOUS General Circulation Model presented in the study by Dentith et al. (2018) “Ocean circulation drifts in multi-millennial climate simulations: the role of salinity corrections and climate feedbacks”. The following ocean variables are included at model resolution (2.5 ° x 3.75 °): salinity, meridional overturning streamfunction, potential temperature, mixed layer depth, and barotropic streamfunction. Precipitation, evaporation and sea ice concentration data are also included at atmospheric resolution (5 ° x 7.5 °). All data has been processed into netCDF timeseries.