Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study

The nature and magnitude of climatic variability during the period of middle Pliocene warmth (ca 3.29–2.97 Ma) is poorly understood. We present a suite of palaeoclimate modelling experiments incorporating an advanced atmospheric general circulation model (GCM), coupled to a Q-flux ocean model for 3....

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Published in:Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Main Authors: Haywood, A.M., Valdes, P.J., Sellwood, B.W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/3610/
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spelling ftunivreading:oai:centaur.reading.ac.uk:3610 2023-09-05T13:21:44+02:00 Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study Haywood, A.M. Valdes, P.J. Sellwood, B.W. 2002 https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/3610/ unknown Haywood, A.M., Valdes, P.J. and Sellwood, B.W. (2002) Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 188 (1-2). pp. 1-24. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00506-0 <https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00506-0 > Article NonPeerReviewed 2002 ftunivreading https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00506-0 2023-08-14T17:27:48Z The nature and magnitude of climatic variability during the period of middle Pliocene warmth (ca 3.29–2.97 Ma) is poorly understood. We present a suite of palaeoclimate modelling experiments incorporating an advanced atmospheric general circulation model (GCM), coupled to a Q-flux ocean model for 3.29, 3.12 and 2.97 Ma BP. Astronomical solutions for the periods in question were derived from the Berger and Loutre BL2 astronomical solution. Boundary conditions, excluding sea surface temperatures (SSTs) which were predicted by the slab-ocean model, were provided from the USGS PRISM2 2°×2° digital data set. The model results indicate that little annual variation (0.5°C) in SSTs, relative to a ‘control’ experiment, occurred during the middle Pliocene in response to the altered orbital configurations. Annual surface air temperatures also displayed little variation. Seasonally, surface air temperatures displayed a trend of cooler temperatures during December, January and February, and warmer temperatures during June, July and August. This pattern is consistent with altered seasonality resulting from the prescribed orbital configurations. Precipitation changes follow the seasonal trend observed for surface air temperature. Compared to present-day, surface wind strength and wind stress over the North Atlantic, North Pacific and Southern Ocean remained greater in each of the Pliocene experiments. This suggests that wind-driven gyral circulation may have been consistently greater during the middle Pliocene. The trend of climatic variability predicted by the GCM for the middle Pliocene accords with geological data. However, it is unclear if the model correctly simulates the magnitude of the variation. This uncertainty is derived from, (a) the relative insensitivity of the GCM to perturbation in the imposed boundary conditions, (b) a lack of detailed time series data concerning changes to terrestrial ice cover and greenhouse gas concentrations for the middle Pliocene and (c) difficulties in representing the effects of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Southern Ocean Loutre CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading Southern Ocean Pacific Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 188 1-2 1 24
institution Open Polar
collection CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading
op_collection_id ftunivreading
language unknown
description The nature and magnitude of climatic variability during the period of middle Pliocene warmth (ca 3.29–2.97 Ma) is poorly understood. We present a suite of palaeoclimate modelling experiments incorporating an advanced atmospheric general circulation model (GCM), coupled to a Q-flux ocean model for 3.29, 3.12 and 2.97 Ma BP. Astronomical solutions for the periods in question were derived from the Berger and Loutre BL2 astronomical solution. Boundary conditions, excluding sea surface temperatures (SSTs) which were predicted by the slab-ocean model, were provided from the USGS PRISM2 2°×2° digital data set. The model results indicate that little annual variation (0.5°C) in SSTs, relative to a ‘control’ experiment, occurred during the middle Pliocene in response to the altered orbital configurations. Annual surface air temperatures also displayed little variation. Seasonally, surface air temperatures displayed a trend of cooler temperatures during December, January and February, and warmer temperatures during June, July and August. This pattern is consistent with altered seasonality resulting from the prescribed orbital configurations. Precipitation changes follow the seasonal trend observed for surface air temperature. Compared to present-day, surface wind strength and wind stress over the North Atlantic, North Pacific and Southern Ocean remained greater in each of the Pliocene experiments. This suggests that wind-driven gyral circulation may have been consistently greater during the middle Pliocene. The trend of climatic variability predicted by the GCM for the middle Pliocene accords with geological data. However, it is unclear if the model correctly simulates the magnitude of the variation. This uncertainty is derived from, (a) the relative insensitivity of the GCM to perturbation in the imposed boundary conditions, (b) a lack of detailed time series data concerning changes to terrestrial ice cover and greenhouse gas concentrations for the middle Pliocene and (c) difficulties in representing the effects of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Haywood, A.M.
Valdes, P.J.
Sellwood, B.W.
spellingShingle Haywood, A.M.
Valdes, P.J.
Sellwood, B.W.
Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
author_facet Haywood, A.M.
Valdes, P.J.
Sellwood, B.W.
author_sort Haywood, A.M.
title Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
title_short Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
title_full Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
title_fullStr Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
title_full_unstemmed Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
title_sort magnitude of climate variability during middle pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study
publishDate 2002
url https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/3610/
geographic Southern Ocean
Pacific
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Pacific
genre North Atlantic
Southern Ocean
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Southern Ocean
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op_relation Haywood, A.M., Valdes, P.J. and Sellwood, B.W. (2002) Magnitude of climate variability during middle Pliocene warmth: a palaeoclimate modelling study. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 188 (1-2). pp. 1-24. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00506-0 <https://doi.org/10.1016/S0031-0182(02)00506-0 >
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