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Fanni Dora Kelemen

and 9 more

The total meridional heat transport (MHT) is relatively stable across different climates. Nevertheless, the strength of individual processes contributing to the total transport are not stable. Here we investigate the MHT and its main components especially in the atmosphere, in five coupled climate model simulations from the Deep-Time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP). These simulations target the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO), a geological time period with high CO2 concentrations, analogous to the upper range of end-of-century CO2 projections. Preindustrial and early Eocene simulations at a range of CO2 levels (1x, 3x and 6x preindustrial values) are used to quantify the MHT changes in response to both CO2 and non-CO2 related forcings. We found that atmospheric poleward heat transport increases with CO2, while the effect of non-CO2 boundary conditions (e.g., paleogeography, land ice, vegetation) is causing more poleward atmospheric heat transport on the Northern and less on the Southern Hemisphere. The changes in paleogeography increase the heat transport via transient eddies at the mid-latitudes in the Eocene. The Hadley cells have an asymmetric response to both the CO2 and non-CO2 constraints. The poleward latent heat transport of monsoon systems increases with rising CO2 concentrations, but this effect is offset by the Eocene topography. Our results show that the changes in the monsoon systems’ latent heat transport is a robust feature of CO2 warming, which is in line with the currently observed precipitation increase of present day monsoon systems.

Barbara Goudsmit

and 19 more

Our current understanding of global mean near-surface (land and sea) air temperature (GMSAT) during the Cenozoic era relies on paleo-proxy estimates of deep-sea temperature combined with assumed relationships between global mean deep-sea temperature (GMDST), global mean sea-surface temperature (GMSST), and GMSAT. The validity of these assumptions is essential in our understanding of past climate states such as the Early Eocene Climate Optimum hothouse climate (EECO, 56–48 Ma). The EECO remains relevant today, because EECO-like CO2 levels are possible in the 22nd century under continued high CO2 emissions. We analyze the relationship between the three global temperature indicators for the EECO using 25 different millennia-long model simulations with varying CO2 levels from the Deep-Time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP). The model simulations show limited spatial variability in deep-sea temperature, indicating that local temperature estimates can be regarded representative of GMDST. Linear regression analysis indicates that compared to GMSST, both GMDST and GMSAT respond more strongly to changes in atmospheric CO2 by factors of 1.18 and 1.17, respectively. Consequently, this model-based analysis validates the assumption that changes in GMDST can be used to estimate changes in GMSAT during the EECO. Paleo-proxies of GMDST, GMSST, and GMSAT during EECO show the best fit with model simulations having an atmospheric CO2 level of 1,680 ppm, which matches paleo-proxies of atmospheric CO2 during EECO. Similar analyses of other past climate states are needed to examine whether these results are robust throughout the Cenozoic, providing insight into the long-term future warming under various shared socioeconomic pathways.

Charles Williams

and 19 more

The early Eocene (~56-48 million years ago) is characterised by high CO2 estimates (1200-2500 ppmv) and elevated global temperatures (~10 to 16°C higher than modern). However, the response of the hydrological cycle during the early Eocene is poorly constrained, especially in regions with sparse data coverage (e.g. Africa). Here we present a study of African hydroclimate during the early Eocene, as simulated by an ensemble of state-of-the-art climate models in the Deep-time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP). A comparison between the DeepMIP pre-industrial simulations and modern observations suggests that model biases are model- and geographically dependent, however these biases are reduced in the model ensemble mean. A comparison between the Eocene simulations and the pre-industrial suggests that there is no obvious wetting or drying trend as the CO2 increases. The results suggest that changes to the land sea mask (relative to modern) in the models may be responsible for the simulated increases in precipitation to the north of Eocene Africa, whereas it is likely that changes in vegetation in the models are responsible for the simulated region of drying over equatorial Eocene Africa. There is an increase in precipitation over equatorial and West Africa and associated drying over northern Africa as CO2 rises. There are also important dynamical changes, with evidence that anticyclonic low-level circulation is replaced by increased south-westerly flow at high CO2 levels. Lastly, a model-data comparison using newly-compiled quantitative climate estimates from palaeobotanical proxy data suggests a marginally better fit with the reconstructions at lower levels of CO2.

Natalie J Burls

and 23 more

The Miocene epoch, spanning 23.03-5.33Ma, was a dynamic climate of sustained, polar amplified warmth. Miocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations are typically reconstructed between 300-600ppm and were potentially higher during the Miocene Climatic Optimum (16.75-14.5Ma). With surface temperature reconstructions pointing to substantial midlatitude and polar warmth, it is unclear what processes maintained the much weaker-than-modern equator-to-pole temperature difference. Here we synthesize several Miocene climate modeling efforts together with available terrestrial and ocean surface temperature reconstructions. We evaluate the range of model-data agreement, highlight robust mechanisms operating across Miocene modelling efforts, and regions where differences across experiments result in a large spread in warming responses. Prescribed CO2 is the primary factor controlling global warming across the ensemble. On average, elements other than CO2, such as Miocene paleogeography and ice sheets, raise global mean temperature by ~ 2℃, with the spread in warming under a given CO2 concentration (due to a combination of the spread in imposed boundary conditions and climate feedback strengths) equivalent to ~1.2 times a CO2 doubling. This study uses an ensemble of opportunity: models, boundary conditions, and reference datasets represent the state-of-art for the Miocene, but are inhomogeneous and not ideal for a formal intermodel comparison effort. Acknowledging this caveat, this study is nevertheless the first Miocene multi-model, multi-proxy comparison attempted so far. This study serves to take stock of the current progress towards simulating Miocene warmth while isolating remaining challenges that may be well served by community-led efforts to coordinate modelling and data activities within a common analysis framework.

Margot Cramwinckel

and 21 more

Earth’s hydrological cycle is expected to intensify in response to global warming, with a ‘wet-gets-wetter, dry-gets-drier’ response anticipated. The subtropics (~15-30°N/S) are predicted to become drier, yet proxy evidence from past warm climates suggests these regions may be characterised by wetter conditions. Here we use an integrated data-modelling approach to reconstruct global- and regional-scale rainfall patterns during the early Eocene (~48-56 million years ago), with an emphasis on the subtropics. Model-derived precipitation–evaporation (P–E) estimates in the tropics (0-15° N/S) and high latitudes (>60° N/S) are positive and increase in response to higher temperatures, whereas model-derived P–E estimates in the subtropics (15-30° N/S) are negative and decrease in response to higher temperatures. This is consistent with a ‘wet-gets-wetter, dry-gets-drier’ response. However, some DeepMIP model simulations predict increasing – rather than decreasing – subtropical precipitation at higher temperatures (e.g., CESM, GFDL). Using moisture budget diagnostics we find that the models with higher subtropical precipitation are characterised by a reduction in the strength of subtropical moisture circulation due to weaker meridional temperature gradients. These model simulations (e.g., CESM, GFDL) agree more closely with various proxy-derived climate metrics and imply a reduction in the strength of subtropical moisture circulation during the early Eocene. Although this was insufficient to induce subtropical wetting, if the meridional temperature was weaker than suggested by the DeepMIP models, this may have led to wetter subtropics. This highlights the important role of the meridional temperature gradient when predicting past (and future) rainfall patterns.