Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change

The Pole-Equator-Pole (PEP) projects of the PANASH (Paleoclimates of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere) programme have significantly advanced our understanding of past climate change on a global basis and helped to integrate paleo-science across regions and research disciplines. PANASH science al...

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Published in:Climate of the Past
Main Authors: Shulmeister, J., Rodbell, D. T., Gagan, M. K., Seltzer, G. O.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2-167-2006
https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/2/167/2006/
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.xcjh8u 2023-05-15T13:58:38+02:00 Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change Shulmeister, J. Rodbell, D. T. Gagan, M. K. Seltzer, G. O. 2018-09-27 https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2-167-2006 https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/2/167/2006/ en eng doi:10.5194/cp-2-167-2006 10670/1.xcjh8u https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/2/167/2006/ undefined Geographica Helvetica - geography eISSN: 1814-9332 geo envir Text https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_18cf/ 2018 fttriple https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2-167-2006 2023-01-22T17:38:38Z The Pole-Equator-Pole (PEP) projects of the PANASH (Paleoclimates of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere) programme have significantly advanced our understanding of past climate change on a global basis and helped to integrate paleo-science across regions and research disciplines. PANASH science allows us to constrain predictions for future climate change and to contribute to the management of consequent environmental changes. We identify three broad areas where PEP science makes key contributions. 1. The pattern of global changes. Knowing the exact timing of glacial advances (synchronous or otherwise) during the last glaciation is critical to understanding inter-hemispheric links in climate. Work in PEPI demonstrated that the tropical Andes in South America were deglaciated earlier than the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and that an extended warming began there ca. 21 000 cal years BP. The general pattern is consistent with Antarctica and has now been replicated from studies in Southern Hemisphere (SH) regions of the PEPII transect. That significant deglaciation of SH alpine systems and Antarctica led deglaciation of NH ice sheets may reflect either i) faster response times in alpine systems and Antarctica, ii) regional moisture patterns that influenced glacier mass balance, or iii) a SH temperature forcing that led changes in the NH. This highlights the limitations of current understanding and the need for further fundamental paleoclimate research. 2. Changes in modes of operation of oscillatory climate systems. Work across all the PEP transects has led to the recognition that the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon has changed markedly through time. It now appears that ENSO operated during the last glacial termination and during the early Holocene, but that precipitation teleconnections even within the Pacific Basin were turned down, or off. In the modern ENSO phenomenon both inter-annual and seven year periodicities are present, with the inter-annual signal dominant. Paleo-data demonstrate that the ... Text Antarc* Antarctica Unknown Pacific Climate of the Past 2 2 167 185
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collection Unknown
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topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Shulmeister, J.
Rodbell, D. T.
Gagan, M. K.
Seltzer, G. O.
Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
topic_facet geo
envir
description The Pole-Equator-Pole (PEP) projects of the PANASH (Paleoclimates of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere) programme have significantly advanced our understanding of past climate change on a global basis and helped to integrate paleo-science across regions and research disciplines. PANASH science allows us to constrain predictions for future climate change and to contribute to the management of consequent environmental changes. We identify three broad areas where PEP science makes key contributions. 1. The pattern of global changes. Knowing the exact timing of glacial advances (synchronous or otherwise) during the last glaciation is critical to understanding inter-hemispheric links in climate. Work in PEPI demonstrated that the tropical Andes in South America were deglaciated earlier than the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and that an extended warming began there ca. 21 000 cal years BP. The general pattern is consistent with Antarctica and has now been replicated from studies in Southern Hemisphere (SH) regions of the PEPII transect. That significant deglaciation of SH alpine systems and Antarctica led deglaciation of NH ice sheets may reflect either i) faster response times in alpine systems and Antarctica, ii) regional moisture patterns that influenced glacier mass balance, or iii) a SH temperature forcing that led changes in the NH. This highlights the limitations of current understanding and the need for further fundamental paleoclimate research. 2. Changes in modes of operation of oscillatory climate systems. Work across all the PEP transects has led to the recognition that the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon has changed markedly through time. It now appears that ENSO operated during the last glacial termination and during the early Holocene, but that precipitation teleconnections even within the Pacific Basin were turned down, or off. In the modern ENSO phenomenon both inter-annual and seven year periodicities are present, with the inter-annual signal dominant. Paleo-data demonstrate that the ...
format Text
author Shulmeister, J.
Rodbell, D. T.
Gagan, M. K.
Seltzer, G. O.
author_facet Shulmeister, J.
Rodbell, D. T.
Gagan, M. K.
Seltzer, G. O.
author_sort Shulmeister, J.
title Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
title_short Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
title_full Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
title_fullStr Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
title_full_unstemmed Inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
title_sort inter-hemispheric linkages in climate change: paleo-perspectives for future climate change
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2-167-2006
https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/2/167/2006/
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