Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses

The paleoclimatic history of a region can be viewed as a series of surface temperature and moisture anomalies through time. The effects of changes in large-scale climatic controls (e.g., insolation, major circulation controls) can be mediated by the influence of smaller-scale controls (e.g., topogra...

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Published in:Quaternary Science Reviews
Main Authors: Edwards, Mary E., Mock, Cary J., Finney, Bruce P., Barber, Valerie A., Bartlein, Patrick J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/35375/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:35375 2023-07-30T04:07:29+02:00 Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses Edwards, Mary E. Mock, Cary J. Finney, Bruce P. Barber, Valerie A. Bartlein, Patrick J. 2001-01 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/35375/ unknown Edwards, Mary E., Mock, Cary J., Finney, Bruce P., Barber, Valerie A. and Bartlein, Patrick J. (2001) Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses. Quaternary Science Reviews, 20 (1-3), 189-202. (doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2>). Article PeerReviewed 2001 ftsouthampton https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2 2023-07-09T20:45:32Z The paleoclimatic history of a region can be viewed as a series of surface temperature and moisture anomalies through time. The effects of changes in large-scale climatic controls (e.g., insolation, major circulation controls) can be mediated by the influence of smaller-scale controls (e.g., topographic barriers, coastlines); this may result in heterogenous surface climatic responses at the regional and sub-regional scale. Divergent paleoclimatic trajectories between regions may be explainable in terms of such meso-scale patterns. Using modern analogues for paleoclimate we examine how the sequence of climatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the interval 12,000–0 14C yr BP could have been generated by specific atmospheric circulation patterns. Fossil-pollen and lake-level records document the long-term trends in temperature and effective moisture for the region. Water-balance modelling provides additional estimates of paleoprecipitation. Synoptic climatological patterns are described using the modern (instrumental) record of upper-level and sea-level pressure, surface temperature, and precipitation. At 12,000 14C yr BP, eastern interior Alaska was cooler and drier than present, a situation generated today by a southward displacement of the jet stream. Conditions warmer and drier than present at 9000 14C yr BP may have been generated by increased ridging north of Alaska and a weakened westerly circulation. Warmer, wetter conditions than present possibly prevailed in the late-middle Holocene; these might reflect ridging over Alaska and troughing further west. Cool, wet conditions feature enhanced westerly flow into Alaska through an eastward shift in the east Asian trough and positive pressure anomalies in the North Pacific; they may be analogous to cold periods of the Little Ice Age. The analogues demonstrate how surface conditions in other parts of Beringia may sometimes be similar to, while at other times different from those in the eastern interior. These broader spatial patterns provide hypotheses ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Alaska Beringia University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Pacific Quaternary Science Reviews 20 1-3 189 202
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description The paleoclimatic history of a region can be viewed as a series of surface temperature and moisture anomalies through time. The effects of changes in large-scale climatic controls (e.g., insolation, major circulation controls) can be mediated by the influence of smaller-scale controls (e.g., topographic barriers, coastlines); this may result in heterogenous surface climatic responses at the regional and sub-regional scale. Divergent paleoclimatic trajectories between regions may be explainable in terms of such meso-scale patterns. Using modern analogues for paleoclimate we examine how the sequence of climatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the interval 12,000–0 14C yr BP could have been generated by specific atmospheric circulation patterns. Fossil-pollen and lake-level records document the long-term trends in temperature and effective moisture for the region. Water-balance modelling provides additional estimates of paleoprecipitation. Synoptic climatological patterns are described using the modern (instrumental) record of upper-level and sea-level pressure, surface temperature, and precipitation. At 12,000 14C yr BP, eastern interior Alaska was cooler and drier than present, a situation generated today by a southward displacement of the jet stream. Conditions warmer and drier than present at 9000 14C yr BP may have been generated by increased ridging north of Alaska and a weakened westerly circulation. Warmer, wetter conditions than present possibly prevailed in the late-middle Holocene; these might reflect ridging over Alaska and troughing further west. Cool, wet conditions feature enhanced westerly flow into Alaska through an eastward shift in the east Asian trough and positive pressure anomalies in the North Pacific; they may be analogous to cold periods of the Little Ice Age. The analogues demonstrate how surface conditions in other parts of Beringia may sometimes be similar to, while at other times different from those in the eastern interior. These broader spatial patterns provide hypotheses ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Edwards, Mary E.
Mock, Cary J.
Finney, Bruce P.
Barber, Valerie A.
Bartlein, Patrick J.
spellingShingle Edwards, Mary E.
Mock, Cary J.
Finney, Bruce P.
Barber, Valerie A.
Bartlein, Patrick J.
Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
author_facet Edwards, Mary E.
Mock, Cary J.
Finney, Bruce P.
Barber, Valerie A.
Bartlein, Patrick J.
author_sort Edwards, Mary E.
title Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
title_short Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
title_full Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
title_fullStr Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
title_full_unstemmed Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
title_sort potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses
publishDate 2001
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/35375/
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Alaska
Beringia
genre_facet Alaska
Beringia
op_relation Edwards, Mary E., Mock, Cary J., Finney, Bruce P., Barber, Valerie A. and Bartlein, Patrick J. (2001) Potential analogues for paleoclimatic variations in eastern interior Alaska during the past 14,000 yr: atmospheric-circulation controls of regional temperature and moisture responses. Quaternary Science Reviews, 20 (1-3), 189-202. (doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2>).
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(00)00123-2
container_title Quaternary Science Reviews
container_volume 20
container_issue 1-3
container_start_page 189
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