A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network

Proxy and instrumental records reflect a quasi-cyclic 50-to-80-year climate signal across the Northern Hemisphere. Three studies, the collection of which is presented in this thesis, document evidence, or lack thereof, of this proposed climate signal. In the first study1, chapter two, an eight-membe...

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Main Author: Wyatt, Marcia Glaze
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: CU Scholar 2012
Subjects:
AMO
PDO
Online Access:https://scholar.colorado.edu/geol_gradetds/36
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1039&context=geol_gradetds
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spelling ftunicolboulder:oai:scholar.colorado.edu:geol_gradetds-1039 2023-05-15T15:03:36+02:00 A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network Wyatt, Marcia Glaze 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholar.colorado.edu/geol_gradetds/36 https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1039&context=geol_gradetds unknown CU Scholar https://scholar.colorado.edu/geol_gradetds/36 https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1039&context=geol_gradetds Geological Sciences Graduate Theses & Dissertations AMO Arctic multidecadal networks PDO synchronization Climate Environmental Studies Geology text 2012 ftunicolboulder 2018-10-07T08:49:24Z Proxy and instrumental records reflect a quasi-cyclic 50-to-80-year climate signal across the Northern Hemisphere. Three studies, the collection of which is presented in this thesis, document evidence, or lack thereof, of this proposed climate signal. In the first study1, chapter two, an eight-member collection of geographically and dynamically diverse twentieth-century climate indices was analyzed with multivariate statistical techniques to assess collective behavior of the network. Emergent from the results was a picture of a climate signal propagating through a sequence of synchronized atmospheric and lagged oceanic circulations across the Northern Hemisphere. Tempo of the signal’s multidecadal variability appears related to that of the low-frequency oscillatory pattern of sea-surface-temperature distribution across the North Atlantic basin, the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO). The third chapter features the second study, the goals of which were two-fold: to gain insights into mechanism of the propagating signal identified in the first study and to probe the signal’s history. Data sets included twentieth-century data and proxy data spanning the interval 1700 to 2000. Findings suggest i) the observed 20th century signal-propagation has existed in somewhat similar fashion for the 300-year length of this study; ii) Eurasian-Arctic Shelf sea-ice plays a strong role in the propagation of the hemispheric climate signal; and iii) dynamics fundamental to generation of the multidecadal component of the Northern Hemisphere’s surface temperature are encoded onto the records of key proxy indices, the combined signatures of which trace the hemispheric circumnavigation of the secularly varying, sequentially propagating climate signal. In the final study in this collection, detailed in chapter four, a network of simulated climate indices, reconstructed from a data set generated by models of the third Coupled Intercomparison Project (CMIP3), were analyzed. Of sixty analyses performed on these networks, none succeeded in reproducing a propagating multidecadal quasi-oscillatory signal. This result, standing in stark contrast to those of the first two studies, may imply that physical mechanisms relevant to signal propagation may be missing from this suite of general circulation models. Text Arctic North Atlantic Sea ice University of Colorado, Boulder: CU Scholar Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Colorado, Boulder: CU Scholar
op_collection_id ftunicolboulder
language unknown
topic AMO
Arctic
multidecadal
networks
PDO
synchronization
Climate
Environmental Studies
Geology
spellingShingle AMO
Arctic
multidecadal
networks
PDO
synchronization
Climate
Environmental Studies
Geology
Wyatt, Marcia Glaze
A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
topic_facet AMO
Arctic
multidecadal
networks
PDO
synchronization
Climate
Environmental Studies
Geology
description Proxy and instrumental records reflect a quasi-cyclic 50-to-80-year climate signal across the Northern Hemisphere. Three studies, the collection of which is presented in this thesis, document evidence, or lack thereof, of this proposed climate signal. In the first study1, chapter two, an eight-member collection of geographically and dynamically diverse twentieth-century climate indices was analyzed with multivariate statistical techniques to assess collective behavior of the network. Emergent from the results was a picture of a climate signal propagating through a sequence of synchronized atmospheric and lagged oceanic circulations across the Northern Hemisphere. Tempo of the signal’s multidecadal variability appears related to that of the low-frequency oscillatory pattern of sea-surface-temperature distribution across the North Atlantic basin, the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO). The third chapter features the second study, the goals of which were two-fold: to gain insights into mechanism of the propagating signal identified in the first study and to probe the signal’s history. Data sets included twentieth-century data and proxy data spanning the interval 1700 to 2000. Findings suggest i) the observed 20th century signal-propagation has existed in somewhat similar fashion for the 300-year length of this study; ii) Eurasian-Arctic Shelf sea-ice plays a strong role in the propagation of the hemispheric climate signal; and iii) dynamics fundamental to generation of the multidecadal component of the Northern Hemisphere’s surface temperature are encoded onto the records of key proxy indices, the combined signatures of which trace the hemispheric circumnavigation of the secularly varying, sequentially propagating climate signal. In the final study in this collection, detailed in chapter four, a network of simulated climate indices, reconstructed from a data set generated by models of the third Coupled Intercomparison Project (CMIP3), were analyzed. Of sixty analyses performed on these networks, none succeeded in reproducing a propagating multidecadal quasi-oscillatory signal. This result, standing in stark contrast to those of the first two studies, may imply that physical mechanisms relevant to signal propagation may be missing from this suite of general circulation models.
format Text
author Wyatt, Marcia Glaze
author_facet Wyatt, Marcia Glaze
author_sort Wyatt, Marcia Glaze
title A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
title_short A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
title_full A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
title_fullStr A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
title_full_unstemmed A Multidecadal Climate Signal Propagating Across the Northern Hemisphere through Indices of a Synchronized Network
title_sort multidecadal climate signal propagating across the northern hemisphere through indices of a synchronized network
publisher CU Scholar
publishDate 2012
url https://scholar.colorado.edu/geol_gradetds/36
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1039&context=geol_gradetds
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
North Atlantic
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
North Atlantic
Sea ice
op_source Geological Sciences Graduate Theses & Dissertations
op_relation https://scholar.colorado.edu/geol_gradetds/36
https://scholar.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1039&context=geol_gradetds
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