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Response of the North African summer monsoon to precession and obliquity forcings in the EC-Earth GCM

Authors :
Bosmans, J.H.C.
Drijfhout, S.S.
Tuenter, E.
Hilgen, F.J.
Lourens, L.J.
NWO-VICI: Evolution of astronomically paced climate changes from Greenhouse to Icehouse world
Stratigraphy & paleontology
Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change
Hydrologie
Stratigraphy and paleontology
Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology
Source :
Climate Dynamics, 44(1-2), 279. Springer Verlag
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We investigate, for the first time, the response of the North African summer monsoon to separate precession and obliquity forcings using a high-resolution state-of-the-art coupled general circulation model, EC-Earth. Our aim is to better understand the mechanisms underlying the astronomical forcing of this low-latitude climate system in detail. The North African monsoon is strengthened when northern hemisphere summer insolation is higher, as is the case in the minimum precession and maximum obliquity experiments. In these experiments, the low surface pressure areas over the Sahara are intensified and located farther north, and the meridional pressure gradient is further enhanced by a stronger South Atlantic high pressure area. As a result, the southwesterly monsoon winds are stronger and bring more moisture into the monsoon region from both the northern and southern tropical Atlantic. The monsoon winds, precipitation and convection also extend farther north into North Africa. The precession-induced changes are much larger than those induced by obliquity, but the latter are remarkable because obliquity-induced changes in summer insolation over the tropics are nearly zero. Our results provide a different explanation than previously proposed for mechanisms underlying the precession- and, especially, obliquity-related signals in paleoclimate proxy records of the North African monsoon. The EC-Earth experiments reveal that, instead of higher latitude mechanisms, increased moisture transport from both the northern and southern tropical Atlantic is responsible for the precession and obliquity signals in the North African monsoon. This increased moisture transport results from both increased insolation and an increased tropical insolation gradient.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09307575
Volume :
44
Issue :
1-2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Climate Dynamics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6560b2e47eb3ee0edb4e8e948b4cc243