Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.

Tree rings dominate millennium-long temperature reconstructions and many records originate from Scandinavia, an area for which the relative roles of external forcing and internal variation on climatic changes are, however, not yet fully understood. Here we compile 1,179 series of maximum latewood de...

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Main Authors: Ulf Büntgen, Christoph C Raible, David Frank, Samuli Helama, Laura Cunningham, Dominik Hofer, Daniel Nievergelt, Anne Verstege, Mauri Timonen, Nils Chr Stenseth, Jan Esper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3178611?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-69abcfcb530443e8b2a01bec2abb12d72020-11-25T00:11:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0169e2513310.1371/journal.pone.0025133Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.Ulf BüntgenChristoph C RaibleDavid FrankSamuli HelamaLaura CunninghamDominik HoferDaniel NievergeltAnne VerstegeMauri TimonenNils Chr StensethJan EsperTree rings dominate millennium-long temperature reconstructions and many records originate from Scandinavia, an area for which the relative roles of external forcing and internal variation on climatic changes are, however, not yet fully understood. Here we compile 1,179 series of maximum latewood density measurements from 25 conifer sites in northern Scandinavia, establish a suite of 36 subset chronologies, and analyse their climate signal. A new reconstruction for the 1483-2006 period correlates at 0.80 with June-August temperatures back to 1860. Summer cooling during the early 17th century and peak warming in the 1930s translate into a decadal amplitude of 2.9°C, which agrees with existing Scandinavian tree-ring proxies. Climate model simulations reveal similar amounts of mid to low frequency variability, suggesting that internal ocean-atmosphere feedbacks likely influenced Scandinavian temperatures more than external forcing. Projected 21st century warming under the SRES A2 scenario would, however, exceed the reconstructed temperature envelope of the past 1,500 years.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3178611?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ulf Büntgen
Christoph C Raible
David Frank
Samuli Helama
Laura Cunningham
Dominik Hofer
Daniel Nievergelt
Anne Verstege
Mauri Timonen
Nils Chr Stenseth
Jan Esper
spellingShingle Ulf Büntgen
Christoph C Raible
David Frank
Samuli Helama
Laura Cunningham
Dominik Hofer
Daniel Nievergelt
Anne Verstege
Mauri Timonen
Nils Chr Stenseth
Jan Esper
Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ulf Büntgen
Christoph C Raible
David Frank
Samuli Helama
Laura Cunningham
Dominik Hofer
Daniel Nievergelt
Anne Verstege
Mauri Timonen
Nils Chr Stenseth
Jan Esper
author_sort Ulf Büntgen
title Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
title_short Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
title_full Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
title_fullStr Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
title_full_unstemmed Causes and consequences of past and projected Scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 AD.
title_sort causes and consequences of past and projected scandinavian summer temperatures, 500-2100 ad.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Tree rings dominate millennium-long temperature reconstructions and many records originate from Scandinavia, an area for which the relative roles of external forcing and internal variation on climatic changes are, however, not yet fully understood. Here we compile 1,179 series of maximum latewood density measurements from 25 conifer sites in northern Scandinavia, establish a suite of 36 subset chronologies, and analyse their climate signal. A new reconstruction for the 1483-2006 period correlates at 0.80 with June-August temperatures back to 1860. Summer cooling during the early 17th century and peak warming in the 1930s translate into a decadal amplitude of 2.9°C, which agrees with existing Scandinavian tree-ring proxies. Climate model simulations reveal similar amounts of mid to low frequency variability, suggesting that internal ocean-atmosphere feedbacks likely influenced Scandinavian temperatures more than external forcing. Projected 21st century warming under the SRES A2 scenario would, however, exceed the reconstructed temperature envelope of the past 1,500 years.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3178611?pdf=render
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