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Unknown eruption source parameters cause large uncertainty in historical volcanic radiative forcing reconstructions

Authors :
Lindsay Lee
Richard Rigby
Kenneth S. Carslaw
Anja Schmidt
Graham Mann
Lauren Marshall
Jill S. Johnson
Marshall, LR [0000-0003-1471-9481]
Schmidt, A [0000-0001-8759-2843]
Mann, GW [0000-0003-1746-2837]
Lee, LA [0000-0002-8029-6328]
Rigby, R [0000-0001-9554-6054]
Carslaw, KS [0000-0002-6800-154X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Marshall, Lauren R. [0000-0003-1471-9481]
Schmidt, Anja [0000-0001-8759-2843]
Mann, Graham W. [0000-0003-1746-2837]
Lee, Lindsay A. [0000-0002-8029-6328]
Rigby, Richard [0000-0001-9554-6054]
Carslaw, Ken S. [0000-0002-6800-154X]
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2021.

Abstract

Funder: U.K. China Research and Innovation Partnership Fund<br />Funder: National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS); Id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000662<br />Reconstructions of volcanic aerosol radiative forcing are required to understand past climate variability. Currently, reconstructions of pre‐20th century volcanic forcing are derived from sulfate concentrations measured in polar ice cores, mainly using a relationship between the average ice‐sheet sulfate deposition and stratospheric sulfate aerosol burden based on a single explosive eruption—the 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo. Here we estimate volcanic radiative forcings and associated uncertainty ranges from ice‐core sulfate records of eight of the largest bipolar deposition signals in the last 2,500 years using statistical emulation of a perturbed parameter ensemble of aerosol‐climate model simulations of explosive eruptions. Extensive sampling of different combinations of eruption source parameters using the emulators reveals that a very wide range of eruptions in different seasons with different sulfur dioxide emissions, eruption latitudes, and emission altitudes produce ice‐sheet sulfate deposition consistent with ice‐core records. Consequently, we find a large range in the volcanic forcing that can be directly attributed to the unknown eruption source parameters. We estimate that the uncertainty in volcanic forcing caused by many plausible eruption realizations leads to uncertainties in the global mean surface cooling of around 1°C for the largest unidentified historical eruptions. Our emulators are available online (https://cemac.github.io/volcanic-forcing-deposition) where eruption realizations for given ice‐sheet sulfate depositions can be explored.

Subjects

Subjects :
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Radio oceanography
Forcing (mathematics)
01 natural sciences
statistical emulation
ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES
Climate change and variability
Oceans
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Sea level change
OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL
geography.geographical_feature_category
General circulation
Regional modeling
Atmospheric effects
sulfate deposition
Hydrological cycles and budgets
Gravity and isostasy
volcanic eruptions
Geophysics
RADIO SCIENCE
volcanic radiative forcing
Land/atmosphere interactions
Global change from geodesy
Atmospheric
Climate impact
Mud volcanism
Volcano monitoring
MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS
CRYOSPHERE
Earthquake ground motions and engineering seismology
Effusive volcanism
HYDROLOGY
Sulfate aerosol
Sea level: variations and mean
Sulfate
Climate variability
Solid Earth
Tsunamis and storm surges
VOLCANOLOGY
Explosive eruption
COMPUTATIONAL GEOPHYSICS
Geological
Ocean/Earth/atmosphere/hydrosphere/cryosphere interactions
Volcano seismology
SEISMOLOGY
Modeling
Benefit‐cost analysis
Radiative forcing
Avalanches
NATURAL HAZARDS
Abrupt/rapid climate change
chemistry
Space and Planetary Science
Volcanic effects
volcanic aerosol
Atmospheric Science
Ocean monitoring with geodetic techniques
Mass balance
Atmospheric sciences
Climate dynamics
Air/sea interactions
Regional climate change
chemistry.chemical_compound
Ice core
INFORMATICS
Numerical modeling
Radiative transfer
Surface waves and tides
Earth system modeling
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY
Explosive volcanism
GEODESY AND GRAVITY
Climatology
Physical modeling
Decadal ocean variability
POLICY SCIENCES
Ocean/atmosphere interactions
Volcano/climate interactions
Climate and interannual variability
Impacts of global change
OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL
Disaster risk analysis and assessment
Research Article
Climate impacts
Risk
Air/sea constituent fluxes
Oceanic
Numerical solutions
Volcanic hazards and risks
GLOBAL CHANGE
ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
geography
BIOGEOSCIENCES
Water cycles
Volcano
Ocean influence of Earth rotation
Environmental science
Theoretical modeling

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2169897X and 21698996
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0fb4092dc2dbbb3fec19567373d62456