Title: Historical%20Changes%20in%20Climate
1Historical Changes in Climate
- Temperature change over last few thousand years
- Less than 1C
- Highly variable from region to region
- Archives for climate data
- Mountain glaciers
- Tree rings
- Corals
- Historical observations
- Instrumental data only during last lt1K years
- General trend
- Dramatic 20th century warming
- Cooler climates prior to 20th century
- Little Ice Age (1400-1900 AD)
2Medieval Climatic Optimum
- Evidence for relative warmth in high latitude
northern hemisphere - Approximately 1000-1300 AD
- Nordic people settled southwest Greenland
- Fringes of ice sheet
- Agricultural evidence for warmth wheat crops
- Little mention of sea ice from this region
- Settlements abandoned during Little Ice Age
- Suggests marginal environment became inhospitable
3Little Ice Age
- Cooling during 1400-1900 AD
- Well documented in Europe
- Colder winters
- Failed crops
- Shorter growing seasons
- Lakes, rivers and ports frozen
- Advance of alpine glaciers
- Frequency of sea ice along coastal Iceland
- Too much ice to fish
- Not a true ice age
4Ice Growth during Little Ice Age
- Evidence for ice growth in Canadian Arctic from
lichen halos - Lichens grow on rock surfaces at known rates
- Lichen halos interpreted as lichen killed by ice
cover - Size of living lichens give time since lichen
death - Small size indicates only 100 years of growth
5Extent of Ice Growth in Canada
- Baffin Island shows large expansion of ice
- Ice killed lichens during Little Ice Age
- Retreat allowed them to grow only 100 years ago
- Mapping lichen halos gives distribution of ice
6Climate Extent Temperature Trend?
- Few observational data and small change
- Restrict determining if global or regional
cooling - Cooling trend not known
- Culmination of slow orbital-scale cooling
- Most recent in a series of millennial-scale
oscillations
7Proxy Measures of Historical Changes
- Instrumental records prior to 1900 largely do not
exist - Quantitative information is scarce
- Problems for archives are several fold
- Records must extend from 1900s back 1000-2000
years - High resolution required high deposition rate
- Must be extremely sensitive to detect small
changes - Archives
- Alpine glacier ice cores
- Tree rings
- Corals
8Alpine Glaciers
- Small ice caps on mountains and valley glaciers
- Make excellent climate archives
- Range from few hundred to thousands of years
- Back to LGM
- Annual layering at surface
- Degrade to decadal resolution at depth
9Alpine Glaciers
- Drilling is difficult task
- Haul equipment to summit
- Lack of oxygen
- Lack of electricity
- Freezing to subfreezing temperatures
- Few mountain glaciers drilled
10Alpine Glaciers
- Multiple ice cores drilled
- Through entire thickness of glacier (100-200 m)
- Photograph shows drill core extruded
- Solar powered drill
11Alpine Glaciers
- Harsh conditions can prevail
- Cores and equipment must be hauled down after
drilling - Produce similar records as Greenland and
Antarctic ice cores - No mention of gases?
12Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru
- Peruvian Andes, at 18,500 feet elevation
- From 1980s show annual-scale d18O and dust
changes - More positive d18O and less dust near 1900
- Warmer temperatures and weaker winds
- More negative d18O and more dust 1600-1900
- Colder temperatures and stronger winds
13Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru
- Little Ice Age showed more negative d18O between
1550 and 1900 AD - Accumulation record more complex
- Pronounced wet period before 1700 followed by
significantly drier conditions thereafter
14Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru
- Return expedition in 1991
- Annual layering at top of core destroyed by
meltwater percolation - Previous record indicated 1500 years without
melting - Meltwater percolation presumably due to 20th
century warming - Rate that was unprecedented compared to last
millennium
15Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru - 1976
16Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru - 2000
17Dunde Ice Cap, Tibet
- Remote region on mountain range separating
China's highest desert, the Qaidam Basin, from
the Gobi - Snow accumulations for 40,000 years on a 60 km2
ice cap deep in sparsely inhabited interior - US and Chinese expedition in 1987
18Dunde Ice Cap, Tibet
- Record averaged over 50-year intervals
- More positive d18O before 1500
- More negative d18O during Little Ice Age
- Transition to more positive d18O at 1700
- Last 50 year interval is more positive than any
other year - Core taken to 12,000 year
19Ice Core Summary
- Climate on low latitude mountains
- Colder during the Little Ice Age
- Uniquely warmer during the 20th century
- Antarctica and Greenland cores
- No distinctly cold pattern during Little Ice Age
- No unique 20th century warmth
- Variation in climate recorded in these archives
has been regional
20Dendroclimatology
- Records from tree rings
- Regions where trees are sensitive to climate
stress - Near limit of natural range
- Climate stress revealed by narrow rings
- Century to millennia-length tree-ring
chronologies are useful for evaluating - Frequency and magnitude of droughts and wet
periods - Placing ecosystem changes into a long-term,
historical context of climate change
21Stable Isotopes in Dendroclimatology
- The d18O of rain varies with changes in
temperature and rainout - Rain is absorbed by the growing tree, the d18O of
water recorded in the tree rings, and become
climate indicators - The d18O of organic material is determined by
- The isotopic composition of the source or soil
water - Enrichment taking place in the leaf water due to
transpiration, resulting in an increased d18O of
leaf water compared to d18O of soil water - Biochemical fractionations
22Tree Ring Climate Calibration
- Tree ring data must be cross-calibrated with
instrumental data - Before can used to interpret ancient climate
- The character of the relationship between climate
and tree growth is assessed - Statistical model is derived to describe that
relationship
23Arctic Tree Rings
- Results synthesized from circumarctic region
- Covers middle and end of Little Ice Age
- Inferred temperature change of 1C
- Not a time of extreme cold
- Warming of the Arctic apparent from mid-20th
century - Reaching highest temperatures during 320 year
record - But temperatures not significantly higher than
18th century
24Tree Ring Studies in Central Asia
- Climate on large continent less moderated by
oceans - Still, similar to Arctic region
- Intervals of warmth during Little Ice Age
- Mid-18th century and earlier
- Colder temperatures in late 16th, late 17th and
mid-to late 19th centuries - Warming in mid- to late 20th century unprecedented
25Tree Rings on Tasmania
- Records from Huon Pines extend back 2000 years
- Best tree ring records of S. hemisphere
- Little Ice Age is cooler than late 20th century
- Does not stand out as uniquely cold
- 20th century warmth stands out in the rate of
increase - Temperature matched by earlier times
26Tree Ring Summary
- Tree ring studies indicate
- Climate variable from region to region
- Over last several hundred years
- No one record fully describes climate trends in
all area - Similar to ice cores
- Climate varied significantly within the Little
Ice Age - In some area even warming to early 20th century
levels - Last few decades generally show maximal warmth
27Coral and Tropical SST
- Decadal resolution SST
- Warm tropical environments
- Pacific Ocean atolls
- Ideal for measuring the occurrence and intensity
of El Nino events - Oxygen isotopic and trace elemental compositions
yield important climate records
28El Nino
- Marked by appearance of unusually warm waters in
the eastern Pacific in December every 2 to 7
years - Radical alteration of the entire Pacific oceanic
and atmospheric system occurs in two phases - In a cool phase, strong SE trade winds push
eastern Pacific surface waters westward, allowing
cool nutrient-rich bottom waters to upwell
29Non-El Nino Years
- The western Pacific during cool phases is
typified by - A pool of warm water stretching eastward to
170W, and an accompanying belt of low pressure
and high precipitation - Indonesian Low - covers parts of Asia and
Australia - A belt of high precipitation, the ITCZ, lies
several degrees north and south of the Equator
and east of the Date Line
30El Nino
- In the warm phase, trade winds weaken and less
eastern Pacific surface water is pushed westward - Upwelling in the eastern Pacific slows
- Warm waters spread across the Pacific increasing
SST by 3-5C in the Galapagos Islands
31El Nino
- ITCZ moves S and W, while the Indonesian Low
follows the warmer waters east - Barometric pressure in Darwin, Australia rises as
higher pressure replaces the Indonesian Low - During particularly severe warm events, winds in
the western Pacific reverse and become mild
westerlies
32Southern Oscillation
- El Nino years are times of
- Unusually high pressure and dry conditions over
N. Australia - Low pressure and high rainfall in the
south-central Pacific - Non-El Nino years are time of
- Low pressure and moist conditions over N.
Australia - Higher pressure and reduced rainfall in the
south-central Pacific - Linking of these two circulation systems in a
large-scale flow known as El Nino Southern
Oscillation (ENSO)
33ENSO
- Long-term changes in atmospheric pressure show
- Warm El Nino years are time of
- Drier conditions and higher pressure in N.
Australia - Wetter conditions and lower pressure in
south-central Pacific
34Atmosphere-Ocean Linkage
- Strong east-to-west trades common in non-El Nino
years - Pile warm surface water in western Pacific
- Warm water is natural source of moisture
- Rising moisture off ocean creates low pressure
- Creates high precipitation in N. Australia and
Indonesia - Rising air cools and flows eastward in the
east-central Pacific - Contributes to cooler and dry conditions near S.
America
35Atmosphere-Ocean Linkage
- Trade winds in eastern Pacific weaken in El Nino
years - Pool of warm western Pacific water diminished
- Water flows eastward
- As warm water replaces cool water in central and
then eastern Pacific - Becomes the source of moisture and low pressure
- As the warm water flow hits western N. America
- Flow diverted N and S bring heavy rainfall to
California and Peru - Loss of warm water in western Pacific create
dryer conditions in Australia and Indonesia
36Teleconnections
- Unusual oceanic and atmospheric conditions
- Tropical regions can affect circulation patterns
outside tropics - Flooding in Peruvian Andes and SE US common
- Droughts in Indonesian, central India and
Australia
37Coral Calibration
- Calibration of coral d18O with SST measurements
- Slight mismatch probably due to salinity
- Galapagos corals record low d18O values during
warm El Nino years
38400 Year Coral SST Record
- Little long term trend obvious
- Generally more negative values near start and end
of record - Perhaps just before 1700 and 1800
- No hint of Little Ice age or 20th century warming
- Some Pacific corals show gradual ocean warming
and more rainfall towards present
39Summary
- Despite efforts, coverage of climate over last
1000 years remains incomplete - Synthesis of N. hemisphere temperature change
- Show a gradual decline for 900 years
- Ending in a dramatic warming in 20th century
40Mechanisms Producing Trend
- Cooling from 1000 to 1900 AD
- Follows orbital cooling pattern
- Follows the millennial-scale pattern
- Little Ice Age cooler than preceding and
following intervals - Began with abrupt cooling
41Mechanisms Producing Trend
- Most obvious trend between 1000-900 years
- Match with gradual orbital cooling
4220th Century Warming
- Stands out as a unique feature
- Rate of warming highest
- Temperatures just now rising above uncertainty
levels of the reconstruction
4320th Century Warning
- Reconstruction suggests that 20th century warming
- Not simply another in long series of natural
climate oscillations - Something unprecedented for the entire millennium
44Historical Records of El Nino
- Records from ships logs date to 1525 AD
- SST and sea level
- Catch of anchovy and other fish
- Sea bird abundance
- Heavy rain and floods
- Disease (malaria and cholera)
- Records ranked qualitatively
45Historical Records of El Nino
- 115 events in 456 years event every 8 years
- Events cluster
- No correlation with Little Ice Age
- Record provides a limited glimpse of climate
- Local changes are difficult to extrapolate to
global scale - El Nino events limited to N. hemisphere winter
46Instrumental Temperature Records
- Records over last 200-300 years
- Air and SST
- Limited regions prior to 1900
- Methods limitation on temperature accuracy
- Population growth affects local temperature
- Change in albedo
- Asphalt and vegetation
- Can change temperature by as much as 30
4720th Century Global Temperature
- Overall trend shows 0.6C temperature rise
- Year to year variability present
- Temperature estimates form satellite disagree
with thermometer - Abundant observations support significant warming
in 20th century
48Glaciers
- Retreat of alpine glaciers indicates climate
warming - Alpine glaciers show varying responses
- Due to heterogeneity of climate system
- Most glaciers have been in retreat
- Rate of melting has accelerated in recent decades
- Most plausible explanation is warming of climate
49Global Average Sea Level
- Difficult nut to crack
- Local rebound and tectonic movements
- Displacement of groundwater into oceans
- Overall agreement of slow rise in sea level
- 12-15 cm in last 100 years
50Cause of Sea Level Rise
- Ice on land has melted adding water to oceans
- Water in the oceans has expanded
- Surface warming of oceans accounts for about 1/3
of rise - Melting ice remains the most probable explanation
for remaining rise
51Melting Glaciers
- Alpine glaciers estimated to contribute 3 cm to
sea level rise - Thermal expansion and alpine glacier retreat
- Make up more than 50 of sea level rise
- Melting of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets
- Antarctica cold and dry environment
- Unlikely contributed to sea level rise
- Some suggestions that ice sheets grew
- Removing up to 10 cm of sea level rise
- Many uncertainties
- Greenland ice sheet other possible source
52Greenland Ice Sheet
- Ruddiman reports that Greenland Ice could have
grown or shrunk - Recent reports suggest both occurred during 20th
Century - Patterson and Reeh (2001, Nature 41460-62)
report - Small changes in eastern Greenland
- Western Greenland showed
- Significantly higher thinning rates
- Thinning rates extending to higher elevation
- Compared to earlier studies
53Patterson and Reeh (2001)
- Survey using trigonometric leveling
- Measured elevation at 300 stations on 1200 km
transect - 1953-1954
- Radar altimetry 1994-1995
- Digital elevation model
- Measured surface elevation changes
54Model Results
- Interpreted ice thickness changes
- Band A shows ice thickening of 9.78.4 cm y-1
- Bands B-D no significant change
- Band E showed average thinning of 16.511 cm y-1
- Band F showed average thinning of 31.010.7 cm y-1
55Implications of Results
- 41-year record measured dynamic response of
glacier - Long-term trend in ice thickness
- West Greenland thinned significantly
- This thinning contributed to global sea level
rise - Paterson and Reeh (2001) do not provide estimate
of West Greenland Ice sheet thinning - To global sea level rise
- Only point out that it is important
56Cloud Cover
- Estimated extent of cloud cover
- Begin in 1900
- Cloud cover increased in both hemispheres
- Especially since 1940
- Reports do not specify what kinds of clouds
increased - Limited usefulness
- Due to rise in surface temperatures or
- Due to increase in the number of particles in air
- Increases cloud condensation nuclei
57Length of Growing Season
- Monitored at Earth stations or by satellite
- Measurements in central Alaska
- Indicate erratic increase in length of growing
season by 2 weeks in 50 years
58Length of Growing Season
- Alaska measurements confirmed by satellite
observations - Observations of color
- Sense chlorophyll produced by vegetation
- North of 45N
- In the mid-1990s
- Growing season started a week earlier in Spring
- Growing season ended a half week later
- Compared to the 1980s
59Reduction in Snow Cover
- Decrease in snow cover in northern hemisphere
- Between 1978 and 1995
- Shown by two kinds of satellite measurements
- Mainly due to earlier melting of snow in Spring
60Reduction in Sea Ice
- Decrease in Arctic sea ice cover by 6 from
1970-1990 - Measurements by submarines indicate
- Remaining ice thinned by 40 from 1950-1995
61Summary
- Records of recent climate change
- Consistent with warming during 20th century
- Records include
- Surface temperature observations
- Alpine glacier melting
- Sea level rise
- Many records are only a few decades in length
- Must interpret cautiously
- Must verify long-term climate change
- Using records that span several more decades
62Sources of Climate Variations
- Tectonic scale changes irrelevant for 20th
Century - Rate of temperature change 0.0001C per 1000
years - Orbital-scale changes averaged over the Earths
surface - Temperature cooled by 5C over last 5000 years
- Equates to 0.2C cooling over last 1000 years
- Millennial-scale changes difficult to asses over
last 1000 years - Best guess is that millennial-scale changes over
the last 1000 years - Less than those caused by orbital-scale changes
63Changes in Solar Radiation
- Changes in strength of Sun
- First satellite measurements in 1978
- 11 year cycles of 0.15 (2 W m-2)
- Cycles this short not likely to cause temperature
change on Earth - Change correlated with sunspot activity
- Long records of sunspot activity
64Sunspot Cycles
- Observations confirm 11-year record existed at
least to 1600 AD - No correlation in record with 11 year climate
cycle - Earths surface temperature seems to correlate
with average sunspot maxima - Over the last 100 years
65Sunspot Strength
- Long-term average sunspot strength provides
enough time for climate to change - Changes in the strength of Sun
- Confirmed using tree ring 14C
- Estimates suggest Sun weaker by 0.25
- Over long cycles of known weakness
- Maunder sunspot minimum (1645-1715)
- Sporer sunspot minimum (1460-1550)
- Correlation with coldest intervals of Little Ice
Age
66Link to Climate
- Size of hypothesized Sun-climate link weak
- N. hemisphere temperature not correlated
- Maunder sunspot minimum
- Times of more abundant sunspots
- Some intervals of climate history
- Show weak trends with sunspot activity
- Some show opposite trend expected
67ENSO Cycles
- Models predicting ENSO events sophisticated
- Ultimate cause of ENSO events remains unknown
- Success in predicting scale of event is difficult
- Regional warming effects of ENSO large (2-5C)
- Cause global scale temperature anomalies of 0.1C
- Cannot contribute markedly to long-term global
trends - Episodic nature of ENSO
- Adds to year-to-year variability in signal
68Large Volcanic Eruptions
- Large scale explosive volcanic eruptions
- Emit SO2 into atmosphere
- Forms sulfate particles which block incoming
solar radiation - Cools climate
- 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo
- Produced 0.6C cooling one year after eruption
- Net cooling of 0.3C
- However, within 2 years back to background levels
69ENSO and Volcanic Eruptions
- Gradual increase in 20th century global
temperature - Not explained by ENSO or volcanic eruptions
- Cannot explain any long-term climate trends
70Summary
- Gradual increase in temperature over last 100
years - Cannot be explained by
- ENSO events or explosive volcanic eruptions
- Erratic climate effect
- Orbital-scale changes
- Produce global cooling, not warming
- Millennial-scale changes could produce warming
- Evidence is inconclusive
- Changes in Suns strength or sunspot activity and
greenhouse gas concentrations - Plausible factors