A Model‐Data Comparison of the Hydrological Response to Miocene Warmth: Leveraging the MioMIP1 Opportunistic Multi‐Model Ensemble

Author:

Acosta R. P.1ORCID,Burls N. J.1ORCID,Pound M. J.2ORCID,Bradshaw C. D.34ORCID,De Boer A. M.5ORCID,Herold N.6ORCID,Huber M.7ORCID,Liu X.7ORCID,Donnadieu Y.8ORCID,Farnsworth A.9ORCID,Frigola A.1011ORCID,Lunt D. J.9ORCID,von der Heydt A. S.12ORCID,Hutchinson D. K.13ORCID,Knorr G.14ORCID,Lohmann G.14ORCID,Marzocchi A.15ORCID,Prange M.10ORCID,Sarr A. C.816ORCID,Li X.17ORCID,Zhang Z.1718ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric, Ocean and Earth Sciences Center for Ocean‐Land Atmosphere Studies George Mason University Fairfax VA USA

2. Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences Northumbria University Newcastle UK

3. Met Office Hadley Centre Exeter UK

4. The Global Systems Institute University of Exeter Exeter UK

5. Department of Geological Sciences Bolin Center for Climate Research Stockholm University Stockholm Sweden

6. Applied Climate Science Pty Ltd. Adelaide SA Australia

7. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette IN USA

8. Aix Marseille University CNRS IRD Coll France INRA CEREGE Aix en Provence France

9. School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

10. MARUM—Center for Marine Environmental Sciences University of Bremen Bremen Germany

11. Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona Spain

12. Department of Physics Faculty of Science Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

13. Climate Change Research Centre University of New South Wales Sydney Australia

14. Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Bremerhaven Germany

15. National Oceanography Centre Southampton UK

16. Université Grenoble Alpes Université Savoie Mont Blanc CNRS IRD Université Gustave Eiffel ISTerre Grenoble France

17. Department of Atmospheric Science School of Environmental Studies China University of Geoscience Wuhan China

18. NORCE Norwegian Research Centre Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Bergen Norway

Abstract

AbstractThe Miocene (23.03–5.33 Ma) is recognized as a period with close to modern‐day paleogeography, yet a much warmer climate. With large uncertainties in future hydroclimate projections, Miocene conditions illustrate a potential future analog for the Earth system. A recent opportunistic Miocene Model Intercomparison Project 1 (MioMIP1) focused on synthesizing published Miocene climate simulations and comparing them with available temperature reconstructions. Here, we build on this effort by analyzing the hydrological cycle response to Miocene forcings across early‐to‐middle (E2MMIO; 20.03–11.6 Ma) and middle‐to‐late Miocene (M2LMIO; 11.5–5.33 Ma) simulations with CO2 concentrations ranging from 200 to 850 ppm and providing a model‐data comparison against available precipitation reconstructions. We find global precipitation increases by ∼2.1 and 2.3% per degree of warming for E2MMIO and M2LMIO simulations, respectively. Models generally agree on a wetter than modern‐day tropics; mid and high‐latitude, however, do not agree on the sign of subtropical precipitation changes with warming. Global monsoon analysis suggests most monsoon regions, except the North American Monsoon, experience higher precipitation rates under warmer conditions. Model‐data comparison shows that mean annual precipitation is underestimated by the models regardless of CO2 concentration, particularly in the mid‐ to high‐latitudes. This suggests that the models may not be (a) resolving key processes driving the hydrological cycle response to Miocene boundary conditions and/or (b) other boundary conditions or processes not considered here are critical to reproducing Miocene hydroclimate. This study highlights the challenges in modeling and reconstructing the Miocene hydrological cycle and serves as a baseline for future coordinated MioMIP efforts.

Funder

Royal Society

Labex

Helmholtz Association

Australian Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Paleontology,Atmospheric Science,Oceanography

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