2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic

A 2800-yr-long August sea surface temperature (aSST) record based on fossil diatom assemblages is generated from a marine sediment core from the northern subpolar North Atlantic. The record is compared with the aSST record from the Norwegian Sea to explore the variability of the aSST gradient betwee...

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Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: NOAA's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) 2014
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Online Access:http://data.npolar.no/dataset/816e992b-63ff-41b5-85b9-b3258a55b31b
id npolardata:oai:npolar.no:dataset/816e992b-63ff-41b5-85b9-b3258a55b31b
record_format openpolar
spelling npolardata:oai:npolar.no:dataset/816e992b-63ff-41b5-85b9-b3258a55b31b 2024-03-03T22:15:37+00:00 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic BEGINDATE: 1400-01-01 ENDDATE: 2004-12-31 ENVELOPE(-98.0539,12.0059,68.6387,50.0) 2014-11-12 text/tsv application/zip http://data.npolar.no/dataset/816e992b-63ff-41b5-85b9-b3258a55b31b unknown NOAA's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE marine EARTH SCIENCE CLIMATE INDICATORS PALEOCLIMATE INDICATORS PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS Dataset 2014 npolardata 2023-08-03T11:02:24Z A 2800-yr-long August sea surface temperature (aSST) record based on fossil diatom assemblages is generated from a marine sediment core from the northern subpolar North Atlantic. The record is compared with the aSST record from the Norwegian Sea to explore the variability of the aSST gradient between these areas during the late Holocene. The aSST records demonstrate the opposite climate tendencies toward a persistent warming in the core site in the subpolar North Atlantic and cooling in the Norwegian Sea. At the multicentennial scale of aSST variability of 600-900 yr, the records are nearly in antiphase with warmer (colder) periods in the subpolar North Atlantic corresponding to the colder (warmer) periods in the Norwegian Sea. At the shorter time scale of 200-450 yr, the records display a phase-locked behavior with a tendency for the positive aSST anomalies in the Norwegian Sea to lead, by ~30 yr, the negative aSST anomalies in the subpolar North Atlantic. This apparent aSST seesaw might have an effect on two major anomalies of the European climate of the past Millennium: Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and the Little Ice Age (LIA). During the MWP warming of the sea surface in the Norwegian Sea occurred in parallel with cooling in the northern subpolar North Atlantic, whereas the opposite pattern emerged during the LIA. The results suggest that the observed aSST seesaw between the subpolar North Atlantic and the Norwegian Sea could be a surface expression of the variability of the eastern and western branches of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) with a possible amplification through atmospheric feedback. Dataset North Atlantic Norwegian Sea Norwegian Polar Data Centre Norwegian Sea ENVELOPE(-98.0539,12.0059,68.6387,50.0)
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Polar Data Centre
op_collection_id npolardata
language unknown
topic CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE
marine
EARTH SCIENCE
CLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS
spellingShingle CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE
marine
EARTH SCIENCE
CLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS
2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
topic_facet CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE
marine
EARTH SCIENCE
CLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE INDICATORS
PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS
description A 2800-yr-long August sea surface temperature (aSST) record based on fossil diatom assemblages is generated from a marine sediment core from the northern subpolar North Atlantic. The record is compared with the aSST record from the Norwegian Sea to explore the variability of the aSST gradient between these areas during the late Holocene. The aSST records demonstrate the opposite climate tendencies toward a persistent warming in the core site in the subpolar North Atlantic and cooling in the Norwegian Sea. At the multicentennial scale of aSST variability of 600-900 yr, the records are nearly in antiphase with warmer (colder) periods in the subpolar North Atlantic corresponding to the colder (warmer) periods in the Norwegian Sea. At the shorter time scale of 200-450 yr, the records display a phase-locked behavior with a tendency for the positive aSST anomalies in the Norwegian Sea to lead, by ~30 yr, the negative aSST anomalies in the subpolar North Atlantic. This apparent aSST seesaw might have an effect on two major anomalies of the European climate of the past Millennium: Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and the Little Ice Age (LIA). During the MWP warming of the sea surface in the Norwegian Sea occurred in parallel with cooling in the northern subpolar North Atlantic, whereas the opposite pattern emerged during the LIA. The results suggest that the observed aSST seesaw between the subpolar North Atlantic and the Norwegian Sea could be a surface expression of the variability of the eastern and western branches of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) with a possible amplification through atmospheric feedback.
format Dataset
title 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
title_short 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
title_full 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
title_fullStr 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution August SST reconstruction from the subpolar North Atlantic
title_sort 2000-year-long diatom inferred high-resolution august sst reconstruction from the subpolar north atlantic
publisher NOAA's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC)
publishDate 2014
url http://data.npolar.no/dataset/816e992b-63ff-41b5-85b9-b3258a55b31b
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 1400-01-01 ENDDATE: 2004-12-31
ENVELOPE(-98.0539,12.0059,68.6387,50.0)
long_lat ENVELOPE(-98.0539,12.0059,68.6387,50.0)
geographic Norwegian Sea
geographic_facet Norwegian Sea
genre North Atlantic
Norwegian Sea
genre_facet North Atlantic
Norwegian Sea
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