The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation

We present a new gridded climate reconstruction for Europe for the last 12,000 years based on pollen data. The reconstruction is an update of Davis et al. (2003) using the same methodology, but with a greatly expanded fossil and surface-sample dataset and more rigorous quality-control. The modern po...

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Published in:Quaternary Science Reviews
Main Authors: MAURI Achille, DAVIS Basil A. S., KAPLAN Jed Oliver, COLLINS Pamela
Language:English
Published: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC90573
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379115000372
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.013
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spelling ftjrc:oai:publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu:JRC90573 2024-09-09T19:40:04+00:00 The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation MAURI Achille DAVIS Basil A. S. KAPLAN Jed Oliver COLLINS Pamela 2015 Print https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC90573 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379115000372 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.013 eng eng PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD JRC90573 2015 ftjrc https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.013 2024-07-22T04:42:16Z We present a new gridded climate reconstruction for Europe for the last 12,000 years based on pollen data. The reconstruction is an update of Davis et al. (2003) using the same methodology, but with a greatly expanded fossil and surface-sample dataset and more rigorous quality-control. The modern pollen dataset has been increased by more than 80%, and the fossil pollen dataset by more than 50%, representing almost 60,000 individual pollen samples. The climate parameters reconstructed include summer/winter and annual temperatures and precipitation, as well as a measure of moisture balance, and growing degree-days above 5 °C. Confidence limits were established for the reconstruction based on transfer function and interpolation uncertainties. The reconstruction takes account of post-glacial isostatic readjustment which resulted in a potential warming bias of up to +1–2 °C for parts of Fennoscandia in the early Holocene, as well as changes in palaeogeography resulting from decaying ice sheets and rising post-glacial sea-levels. This new dataset has been evaluated against previously published independent quantitative climate reconstructions from a variety of archives on a site-by-site basis across Europe. The results of this comparison are generally very good; only chironomid-based reconstructions showed substantial differences with our values. Our reconstruction is available for download as gridded maps throughout the Holocene on a 1000-year time-step. The gridded format makes our reconstructions suitable for comparison with climate model output and for other applications such as vegetation and land-use modelling. Our new climate reconstruction suggests that warming in Europe during the mid-Holocene was greater in winter than in summer, an apparent paradox that is not consistent with current climate model simulations and traditional interpretations of Milankovitch theory. JRC.H.3 - Forest Resources and Climate Other/Unknown Material Fennoscandia Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository Quaternary Science Reviews 112 109 127
institution Open Polar
collection Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository
op_collection_id ftjrc
language English
description We present a new gridded climate reconstruction for Europe for the last 12,000 years based on pollen data. The reconstruction is an update of Davis et al. (2003) using the same methodology, but with a greatly expanded fossil and surface-sample dataset and more rigorous quality-control. The modern pollen dataset has been increased by more than 80%, and the fossil pollen dataset by more than 50%, representing almost 60,000 individual pollen samples. The climate parameters reconstructed include summer/winter and annual temperatures and precipitation, as well as a measure of moisture balance, and growing degree-days above 5 °C. Confidence limits were established for the reconstruction based on transfer function and interpolation uncertainties. The reconstruction takes account of post-glacial isostatic readjustment which resulted in a potential warming bias of up to +1–2 °C for parts of Fennoscandia in the early Holocene, as well as changes in palaeogeography resulting from decaying ice sheets and rising post-glacial sea-levels. This new dataset has been evaluated against previously published independent quantitative climate reconstructions from a variety of archives on a site-by-site basis across Europe. The results of this comparison are generally very good; only chironomid-based reconstructions showed substantial differences with our values. Our reconstruction is available for download as gridded maps throughout the Holocene on a 1000-year time-step. The gridded format makes our reconstructions suitable for comparison with climate model output and for other applications such as vegetation and land-use modelling. Our new climate reconstruction suggests that warming in Europe during the mid-Holocene was greater in winter than in summer, an apparent paradox that is not consistent with current climate model simulations and traditional interpretations of Milankovitch theory. JRC.H.3 - Forest Resources and Climate
author MAURI Achille
DAVIS Basil A. S.
KAPLAN Jed Oliver
COLLINS Pamela
spellingShingle MAURI Achille
DAVIS Basil A. S.
KAPLAN Jed Oliver
COLLINS Pamela
The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
author_facet MAURI Achille
DAVIS Basil A. S.
KAPLAN Jed Oliver
COLLINS Pamela
author_sort MAURI Achille
title The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
title_short The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
title_full The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
title_fullStr The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
title_full_unstemmed The climate of Europe during the Holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
title_sort climate of europe during the holocene: a gridded pollen-based reconstruction and its multi-proxy evaluation
publisher PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
publishDate 2015
url https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC90573
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379115000372
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.013
genre Fennoscandia
genre_facet Fennoscandia
op_relation JRC90573
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.013
container_title Quaternary Science Reviews
container_volume 112
container_start_page 109
op_container_end_page 127
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