1. The Role of Small to Moderate Volcanic Eruptions in the Early 19th Century Climate.
- Author
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Fang, Shih‐Wei, Sigl, Michael, Toohey, Matthew, Jungclaus, Johann, Zanchettin, Davide, and Timmreck, Claudia
- Subjects
VOLCANIC eruptions ,NINETEENTH century ,GLOBAL cooling ,SOLAR radiation ,ATMOSPHERIC models ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio - Abstract
Small‐to‐moderate volcanic eruptions can lead to significant surface cooling when they occur clustered, as observed in recent decades. In this study, based on new high‐resolution ice‐core data from Greenland, we produce a new volcanic forcing data set that includes several small‐to‐moderate eruptions not included in prior reconstructions and investigate their climate impacts of the early 19th century through ensemble simulations with the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model. We find that clustered small‐to‐moderate eruptions produce significant additional global surface cooling (∼0.07 K) during the period 1812–1820, superposing with the cooling by large eruptions in 1809 (unidentified location) and 1815 (Tambora). This additional cooling helps explain the reconstructed long‐lasting cooling after the large eruptions, but simulated regional impacts cannot be confirmed with reconstructions due to a low signal‐to‐noise ratio. This study highlights the importance of small‐to‐moderate eruptions for climate simulations as their impacts can be comparable with that of solar irradiance changes. Plain Language Summary: Volcanic eruptions can influence global climate through the emission of sulfuric acids shielding Earth from incoming solar radiation. Previous volcanic reconstructions based on ice‐cores from the polar regions, however, only considered very strong volcanic eruptions. In this study, based on new ice‐core measurements from Greenland, we reconstruct for the first time volcanic sulfur emissions from small to medium‐sized eruptions and investigate their impact on climate in the early 19th century through experiments with the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI‐ESM1.2‐LR). We find that clustering of small to medium‐sized eruptions can cause significant global surface cooling (∼0.07 K), which during the 1812–1820 period amplified the cooling caused by the two known large eruptions of the period (1809 unidentified and 1815 Tambora). This additional surface cooling from small eruptions helps explain the long‐lasting cooling after the two strong eruptions generally found in the reconstruction, but the simulated regional impacts cannot be fully confirmed with reconstructions that are too noisy. This study highlights the importance of including small‐to‐moderate eruptions for climate model simulations as their impacts are comparable with that of solar irradiance forcing. Key Points: A new ice‐core based reconstruction of volcanic sulfate in the atmosphere (1733–1895) includes small‐to‐moderate eruptionsSmall‐to‐moderate eruptions can induce significant surface cooling and help explain the long‐lasting cooling in the early 19th centuryRegional cooling from small‐to‐moderate eruptions may be influenced by the circulation changes from the 1815 Tambora for over 10 years [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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