Detection of Human Influence on a New, Validated 1500-Year Temperature Reconstruction

Author:

Hegerl Gabriele C.1,Crowley Thomas J.1,Allen Myles2,Hyde William T.1,Pollack Henry N.3,Smerdon Jason4,Zorita Eduardo5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Nicholas School for the Environment and Earth Sciences, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina

2. Climate Dynamics Group, Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

3. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

4. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, New York

5. GKSS, Geesthacht, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Climate records over the last millennium place the twentieth-century warming in a longer historical context. Reconstructions of millennial temperatures show a wide range of variability, raising questions about the reliability of currently available reconstruction techniques and the uniqueness of late-twentieth-century warming. A calibration method is suggested that avoids the loss of low-frequency variance. A new reconstruction using this method shows substantial variability over the last 1500 yr. This record is consistent with independent temperature change estimates from borehole geothermal records, compared over the same spatial and temporal domain. The record is also broadly consistent with other recent reconstructions that attempt to fully recover low-frequency climate variability in their central estimate. High variability in reconstructions does not hamper the detection of greenhouse gas–induced climate change, since a substantial fraction of the variance in these reconstructions from the beginning of the analysis in the late thirteenth century to the end of the records can be attributed to external forcing. Results from a detection and attribution analysis show that greenhouse warming is detectable in all analyzed high-variance reconstructions (with the possible exception of one ending in 1925), and that about a third of the warming in the first half of the twentieth century can be attributed to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. The estimated magnitude of the anthropogenic signal is consistent with most of the warming in the second half of the twentieth century being anthropogenic.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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