Insights into Atlantic multidecadal variability using the Last Millennium Reanalysis framework
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Published:2018-02-09
Issue:2
Volume:14
Page:157-174
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Singh Hansi K. A., Hakim Gregory J.ORCID, Tardif Robert, Emile-Geay JulienORCID, Noone David C.
Abstract
Abstract. The Last Millennium Reanalysis (LMR) employs a data assimilation
approach to reconstruct climate fields from annually resolved proxy
data over years 0–2000 CE. We use the LMR to examine Atlantic
multidecadal variability (AMV) over the last 2 millennia and find
several robust thermodynamic features associated with a positive
Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) index that reveal a
dynamically consistent pattern of variability: the Atlantic and most
continents warm; sea ice thins over the Arctic and retreats over the
Greenland, Iceland, and Norwegian seas; and equatorial precipitation
shifts northward. The latter is consistent with anomalous southward
energy transport mediated by the atmosphere. Net downward shortwave
radiation increases at both the top of the atmosphere and the surface,
indicating a decrease in planetary albedo, likely due to a decrease
in low clouds. Heat is absorbed by the climate system and the
oceans warm. Wavelet analysis of the AMO time series shows a
reddening of the frequency spectrum on the 50- to 100-year timescale, but no evidence of a distinct multidecadal or centennial
spectral peak. This latter result is insensitive to both the choice of
prior model and the calibration dataset used in the data assimilation
algorithm, suggesting that the lack of a distinct multidecadal
spectral peak is a robust result.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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