Climate variability in the subarctic area for the last 2 millennia
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15173Date
2018-01-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Nicolle, Marie; Debret, Maxime; Massei, Nicolas; Colin, Christophe; de Vernal, Anne; Divine, Dmitry V; Werner, Johannes; Hormes, Anne; Korhola, Atte; Linderholm, Hans W.Abstract
To put recent climate change in perspective, it is
necessary to extend the instrumental climate records with
proxy data from paleoclimate archives. Arctic climate variability for the last 2 millennia has been investigated using
statistical and signal analyses from three regionally averaged records from the North Atlantic, Siberia and Alaska
based on many types of proxy data archived in the Arctic
2k database v1.1.1. In the North Atlantic and Alaska, the major climatic trend is characterized by long-term cooling interrupted by recent warming that started at the beginning of the
19th century. This cooling is visible in the Siberian region
at two sites, warming at the others. The cooling of the Little Ice Age (LIA) was identified from the individual series,
but it is characterized by wide-range spatial and temporal expression of climate variability, in contrary to the Medieval
Climate Anomaly. The LIA started at the earliest by around
AD 1200 and ended at the latest in the middle of the 20th century. The widespread temporal coverage of the LIA did not
show regional consistency or particular spatial distribution
and did not show a relationship with archive or proxy type
either. A focus on the last 2 centuries shows a recent warming characterized by a well-marked warming trend parallel
with increasing greenhouse gas emissions. It also shows a
multidecadal variability likely due to natural processes acting
on the internal climate system on a regional scale. A ∼ 16–
30-year cycle is found in Alaska and seems to be linked to
the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, whereas ∼ 20–30- and ∼ 50–
90-year periodicities characterize the North Atlantic climate
variability, likely in relation with the Atlantic Multidecadal
Oscillation. These regional features are probably linked to
the sea ice cover fluctuations through ice–temperature positive feedback.
Description
Source at https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-101-2018.