Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima

Understanding atmospheric response to radiative forcing, including the intensity and distribution of wind patterns is critical as this might have important implications in the coming decades. Long-term episodes of reduced solar activity (i.e. Grand Solar Minima, GSM) have triggered rapid climate cha...

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Main Authors: Harding, Poppy, Martin Puertas, Celia, Sjolte, J, Walsh, Amy, Tjallingii, Rick, Langdon, Catherine, Blockley, Simon, Brauer, Achim, Langdon, Peter, Milner, Alice, Muscheler, Raymond, Perez, M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/1/Harding_et_al._Accepted_CLDY_D_21_00799.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:467314 2023-12-03T10:26:38+01:00 Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima Harding, Poppy Martin Puertas, Celia Sjolte, J Walsh, Amy Tjallingii, Rick Langdon, Catherine Blockley, Simon Brauer, Achim Langdon, Peter Milner, Alice Muscheler, Raymond Perez, M 2022-06-13 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/1/Harding_et_al._Accepted_CLDY_D_21_00799.pdf en English eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/1/Harding_et_al._Accepted_CLDY_D_21_00799.pdf Harding, Poppy, Martin Puertas, Celia, Sjolte, J, Walsh, Amy, Tjallingii, Rick, Langdon, Catherine, Blockley, Simon, Brauer, Achim, Langdon, Peter, Milner, Alice, Muscheler, Raymond and Perez, M (2022) Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima. Climate Dynamics. (In Press) accepted_manuscript Article PeerReviewed 2022 ftsouthampton 2023-11-03T00:04:57Z Understanding atmospheric response to radiative forcing, including the intensity and distribution of wind patterns is critical as this might have important implications in the coming decades. Long-term episodes of reduced solar activity (i.e. Grand Solar Minima, GSM) have triggered rapid climate change in the past, recorded in proxy-based records, including varved sediments from Meerfelder Maar, Germany, where the Homeric GSM (~2800 years ago) was studied. This study reconstructs windy conditions during the same GSM from Diss Mere, another varved record in England, to support the solar-wind linkage in the North Atlantic-European region. We use diatoms as proxies for windiness and support the palaeolimnological and palaeoclimate interpretation with a multi-proxy chironomids and pollen) evidence. The diatom assemblage documents a shift from Pantocsekiella ocellata dominance to Stephanodiscus parvus and Lindavia comta, indicating a shift to more turbulent waters from ~2767 ± 28, linked to increased windiness. This shift is synchronous with changes in 14C production, linked to solar activity changes during the GSM. Both proxy records reflect a rapid and synchronous atmospheric response (i.e. stronger winds) at the onset and during the GSM in the North Atlantic and continental Europe. In order to test whether this solar-wind linkage is consistent during other GSMs and to understand the underlying climate dynamics, we analyse the wind response to solar forcing at the two study sites during the Little Ice Age, a period that includes several GSMs. For this, we have used a reconstruction based on a 1200-year-long simulation with an isotope-enabled climate model. Our study suggests that wind anomalies in the North Atlantic-European sector may relate to an anomalous atmospheric circulation in response to long-term solar forcing leading to north-easterlies modulated by the East Atlantic pattern. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description Understanding atmospheric response to radiative forcing, including the intensity and distribution of wind patterns is critical as this might have important implications in the coming decades. Long-term episodes of reduced solar activity (i.e. Grand Solar Minima, GSM) have triggered rapid climate change in the past, recorded in proxy-based records, including varved sediments from Meerfelder Maar, Germany, where the Homeric GSM (~2800 years ago) was studied. This study reconstructs windy conditions during the same GSM from Diss Mere, another varved record in England, to support the solar-wind linkage in the North Atlantic-European region. We use diatoms as proxies for windiness and support the palaeolimnological and palaeoclimate interpretation with a multi-proxy chironomids and pollen) evidence. The diatom assemblage documents a shift from Pantocsekiella ocellata dominance to Stephanodiscus parvus and Lindavia comta, indicating a shift to more turbulent waters from ~2767 ± 28, linked to increased windiness. This shift is synchronous with changes in 14C production, linked to solar activity changes during the GSM. Both proxy records reflect a rapid and synchronous atmospheric response (i.e. stronger winds) at the onset and during the GSM in the North Atlantic and continental Europe. In order to test whether this solar-wind linkage is consistent during other GSMs and to understand the underlying climate dynamics, we analyse the wind response to solar forcing at the two study sites during the Little Ice Age, a period that includes several GSMs. For this, we have used a reconstruction based on a 1200-year-long simulation with an isotope-enabled climate model. Our study suggests that wind anomalies in the North Atlantic-European sector may relate to an anomalous atmospheric circulation in response to long-term solar forcing leading to north-easterlies modulated by the East Atlantic pattern.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Harding, Poppy
Martin Puertas, Celia
Sjolte, J
Walsh, Amy
Tjallingii, Rick
Langdon, Catherine
Blockley, Simon
Brauer, Achim
Langdon, Peter
Milner, Alice
Muscheler, Raymond
Perez, M
spellingShingle Harding, Poppy
Martin Puertas, Celia
Sjolte, J
Walsh, Amy
Tjallingii, Rick
Langdon, Catherine
Blockley, Simon
Brauer, Achim
Langdon, Peter
Milner, Alice
Muscheler, Raymond
Perez, M
Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
author_facet Harding, Poppy
Martin Puertas, Celia
Sjolte, J
Walsh, Amy
Tjallingii, Rick
Langdon, Catherine
Blockley, Simon
Brauer, Achim
Langdon, Peter
Milner, Alice
Muscheler, Raymond
Perez, M
author_sort Harding, Poppy
title Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
title_short Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
title_full Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
title_fullStr Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
title_full_unstemmed Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima
title_sort wind regime changes in the euro-atlantic region driven by late-holocene grand solar minima
publishDate 2022
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/1/Harding_et_al._Accepted_CLDY_D_21_00799.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/467314/1/Harding_et_al._Accepted_CLDY_D_21_00799.pdf
Harding, Poppy, Martin Puertas, Celia, Sjolte, J, Walsh, Amy, Tjallingii, Rick, Langdon, Catherine, Blockley, Simon, Brauer, Achim, Langdon, Peter, Milner, Alice, Muscheler, Raymond and Perez, M (2022) Wind regime changes in the Euro-Atlantic region driven by Late-Holocene Grand Solar Minima. Climate Dynamics. (In Press)
op_rights accepted_manuscript
_version_ 1784275987907739648