Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland

A new comprehensive record of long-term Icelandic sea surface temperature measurements, which have been updated and filled in with reference to air temperature records, is presented. The new SST series reveal important features of the variability of climate in Iceland and the northern North Atlantic...

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Published in:Journal of Climate
Main Authors: Hanna, E., Jansson, T., Olafsson, J., Valdimarsson, H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/
https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/1/26056%20jcli3933%252E1.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3933.1
id ftulincoln:oai:eprints.lincoln.ac.uk:26056
record_format openpolar
spelling ftulincoln:oai:eprints.lincoln.ac.uk:26056 2023-05-15T16:45:28+02:00 Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland Hanna, E. Jansson, T. Olafsson, J. Valdimarsson, H. 2006-09-01 application/pdf https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/ https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/1/26056%20jcli3933%252E1.pdf https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3933.1 en eng American Meteorological Society https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/1/26056%20jcli3933%252E1.pdf Hanna, E., Jansson, T., Olafsson, J. and Valdimarsson, H. (2006) Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland. Journal of Climate, 19 (21). pp. 5652-5666. ISSN 0894-8755 doi:10.1175/JCLI3933.1 F700 Ocean Sciences Article PeerReviewed 2006 ftulincoln https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3933.1 2022-03-02T20:07:06Z A new comprehensive record of long-term Icelandic sea surface temperature measurements, which have been updated and filled in with reference to air temperature records, is presented. The new SST series reveal important features of the variability of climate in Iceland and the northern North Atlantic. This study documents site histories and possible resulting inconsistencies and biases, for example, changes in observing sites and instruments. A new 119-yr continuous time series for north Iceland SST is presented, which should prove particularly useful for investigating air-sea ice interactions around northern Iceland. As this is the only part of the country to be regularly engulfed by winter and/or spring sea ice, it is therefore highly sensitive to climatic change. The coastal series correlate well overall with independent Hadley Centre Sea Ice and SST dataset version 1 (HadISST1) series from the adjacent open ocean (mean r = 0.59), although correlations are generally higher in summer than winter and for south and east Iceland compared with the west and north. The seasonal temperature range is generally twice as large at the coastal sites because of differential effects of radiation, melting, mixing, and advection of warmer or colder air or water masses, as well as spatial resolution differences and smoothing in HadISST1. The long-term climatological averages and graphs for the 10 SST stations and/or their composites reveal decadal variations and trends that are generally similar to Icelandic air temperature records: a cold late-nineteenth-century, rapid warming around the 1920s, an overall warm peak circa 1940, cooling until an "icy" period circa 1970, followed by warming. Regional differences between sites include relatively greater (lesser) long-term variations for the eastern and southern (western and northern) Icelandic coasts, suggesting greater variability and influence of ocean current advection in the southeast. Moreover, Vestmannaeyjar SST data reveal that the late-nineteenth-century cold period in the ocean was not confined to the cold currents off north and east Iceland but also affected the south coast markedly. The Stykkishólmur, Iceland, SST record is relatively noisy and shows very little decadal variation, which may largely be due to fjord ice in cold winters suppressing low temperatures. It is anticipated that researchers may find these Icelandic SST series of practical use as a historic measure of air-sea-climate interactions around Iceland. © 2006 American Meteorological Society. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland North Atlantic Sea ice Vestmannaeyjar University of Lincoln: Lincoln Repository Vestmannaeyjar ENVELOPE(-20.391,-20.391,63.362,63.362) Journal of Climate 19 21 5652 5666
institution Open Polar
collection University of Lincoln: Lincoln Repository
op_collection_id ftulincoln
language English
topic F700 Ocean Sciences
spellingShingle F700 Ocean Sciences
Hanna, E.
Jansson, T.
Olafsson, J.
Valdimarsson, H.
Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
topic_facet F700 Ocean Sciences
description A new comprehensive record of long-term Icelandic sea surface temperature measurements, which have been updated and filled in with reference to air temperature records, is presented. The new SST series reveal important features of the variability of climate in Iceland and the northern North Atlantic. This study documents site histories and possible resulting inconsistencies and biases, for example, changes in observing sites and instruments. A new 119-yr continuous time series for north Iceland SST is presented, which should prove particularly useful for investigating air-sea ice interactions around northern Iceland. As this is the only part of the country to be regularly engulfed by winter and/or spring sea ice, it is therefore highly sensitive to climatic change. The coastal series correlate well overall with independent Hadley Centre Sea Ice and SST dataset version 1 (HadISST1) series from the adjacent open ocean (mean r = 0.59), although correlations are generally higher in summer than winter and for south and east Iceland compared with the west and north. The seasonal temperature range is generally twice as large at the coastal sites because of differential effects of radiation, melting, mixing, and advection of warmer or colder air or water masses, as well as spatial resolution differences and smoothing in HadISST1. The long-term climatological averages and graphs for the 10 SST stations and/or their composites reveal decadal variations and trends that are generally similar to Icelandic air temperature records: a cold late-nineteenth-century, rapid warming around the 1920s, an overall warm peak circa 1940, cooling until an "icy" period circa 1970, followed by warming. Regional differences between sites include relatively greater (lesser) long-term variations for the eastern and southern (western and northern) Icelandic coasts, suggesting greater variability and influence of ocean current advection in the southeast. Moreover, Vestmannaeyjar SST data reveal that the late-nineteenth-century cold period in the ocean was not confined to the cold currents off north and east Iceland but also affected the south coast markedly. The Stykkishólmur, Iceland, SST record is relatively noisy and shows very little decadal variation, which may largely be due to fjord ice in cold winters suppressing low temperatures. It is anticipated that researchers may find these Icelandic SST series of practical use as a historic measure of air-sea-climate interactions around Iceland. © 2006 American Meteorological Society.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hanna, E.
Jansson, T.
Olafsson, J.
Valdimarsson, H.
author_facet Hanna, E.
Jansson, T.
Olafsson, J.
Valdimarsson, H.
author_sort Hanna, E.
title Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
title_short Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
title_full Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
title_fullStr Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland
title_sort icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern north atlantic. part i: comparison with hadisst1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of ssts around iceland
publisher American Meteorological Society
publishDate 2006
url https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/
https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/1/26056%20jcli3933%252E1.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3933.1
long_lat ENVELOPE(-20.391,-20.391,63.362,63.362)
geographic Vestmannaeyjar
geographic_facet Vestmannaeyjar
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
Sea ice
Vestmannaeyjar
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
Sea ice
Vestmannaeyjar
op_relation https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/26056/1/26056%20jcli3933%252E1.pdf
Hanna, E., Jansson, T., Olafsson, J. and Valdimarsson, H. (2006) Icelandic coastal sea surface temperature records constructed: putting the pulse on air-sea-climate interactions in the northern North Atlantic. Part I: Comparison with HadISST1 open-ocean surface temperatures and preliminary analysis of long-term patterns and anomalies of SSTs around Iceland. Journal of Climate, 19 (21). pp. 5652-5666. ISSN 0894-8755
doi:10.1175/JCLI3933.1
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3933.1
container_title Journal of Climate
container_volume 19
container_issue 21
container_start_page 5652
op_container_end_page 5666
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