Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered

Comparison of simulated and reconstructed past climate variability within the last millennium provides an opportunity to aid the understanding and interpretation of palaeoclimate proxy data and to test hypotheses regarding external forcings, feedback mechanisms and internal climate variability under...

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Main Author: Anders Moberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2013-02-01
Series:Tellus: Series B, Chemical and Physical Meteorology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tellusb.net/index.php/tellusb/article/view/19921/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-cfebcea72aaf43c18c2106b24626feaa2020-11-25T01:30:15ZengTaylor & Francis GroupTellus: Series B, Chemical and Physical Meteorology1600-08892013-02-016501810.3402/tellusb.v65i0.19921Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encounteredAnders MobergComparison of simulated and reconstructed past climate variability within the last millennium provides an opportunity to aid the understanding and interpretation of palaeoclimate proxy data and to test hypotheses regarding external forcings, feedback mechanisms and internal climate variability under conditions close to those of the present day. Most such comparisons have been made at the Northern Hemispheric scale, of which a selection of recent results is briefly discussed here. Uncertainties in climate and forcing reconstructions, along with the simplified representations of the true climate system represented by climate models, limit our possibility to draw certain conclusions regarding the nature of forced and unforced climate variability. Additionally, hemispheric-scale temperature variations have been comparatively small, wherefore the last millennium is apparently not a particularly useful period for estimating climate sensitivity. Nevertheless, several investigators have concluded that Northern Hemispheric-scale decadal-mean temperatures in the last millennium show a significant influence from natural external forcing, where volcanic forcing is significantly detectable while solar forcing is less robustly detected. The amplitude of centennial-scale variations in solar forcing has been a subject for much debate, but current understanding of solar physics implies that these variations have been small – similar in magnitude to those within recent sunspot cycles – and thus they have not been a main driver of climate in the last millennium. This interpretation is supported by various comparisons between forced climate model simulations and temperature proxy data. Anthropogenic greenhouse gas and aerosol forcing has been detected by the end of Northern Hemispheric temperature reconstructions.http://www.tellusb.net/index.php/tellusb/article/view/19921/pdf_1Palaeoclimateclimate proxy dataclimate modelsclimate forcingsexternal climate variabilityinternal climate variabilityNorthern Hemispheretemperaturelast millennium
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anders Moberg
spellingShingle Anders Moberg
Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
Tellus: Series B, Chemical and Physical Meteorology
Palaeoclimate
climate proxy data
climate models
climate forcings
external climate variability
internal climate variability
Northern Hemisphere
temperature
last millennium
author_facet Anders Moberg
author_sort Anders Moberg
title Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
title_short Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
title_full Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
title_fullStr Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
title_full_unstemmed Comparisons of simulated and observed Northern Hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
title_sort comparisons of simulated and observed northern hemisphere temperature variations during the past millennium – selected lessons learned and problems encountered
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Tellus: Series B, Chemical and Physical Meteorology
issn 1600-0889
publishDate 2013-02-01
description Comparison of simulated and reconstructed past climate variability within the last millennium provides an opportunity to aid the understanding and interpretation of palaeoclimate proxy data and to test hypotheses regarding external forcings, feedback mechanisms and internal climate variability under conditions close to those of the present day. Most such comparisons have been made at the Northern Hemispheric scale, of which a selection of recent results is briefly discussed here. Uncertainties in climate and forcing reconstructions, along with the simplified representations of the true climate system represented by climate models, limit our possibility to draw certain conclusions regarding the nature of forced and unforced climate variability. Additionally, hemispheric-scale temperature variations have been comparatively small, wherefore the last millennium is apparently not a particularly useful period for estimating climate sensitivity. Nevertheless, several investigators have concluded that Northern Hemispheric-scale decadal-mean temperatures in the last millennium show a significant influence from natural external forcing, where volcanic forcing is significantly detectable while solar forcing is less robustly detected. The amplitude of centennial-scale variations in solar forcing has been a subject for much debate, but current understanding of solar physics implies that these variations have been small – similar in magnitude to those within recent sunspot cycles – and thus they have not been a main driver of climate in the last millennium. This interpretation is supported by various comparisons between forced climate model simulations and temperature proxy data. Anthropogenic greenhouse gas and aerosol forcing has been detected by the end of Northern Hemispheric temperature reconstructions.
topic Palaeoclimate
climate proxy data
climate models
climate forcings
external climate variability
internal climate variability
Northern Hemisphere
temperature
last millennium
url http://www.tellusb.net/index.php/tellusb/article/view/19921/pdf_1
work_keys_str_mv AT andersmoberg comparisonsofsimulatedandobservednorthernhemispheretemperaturevariationsduringthepastmillenniumx2013selectedlessonslearnedandproblemsencountered
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