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Investigating Mesozoic Climate Trends and Sensitivities With a Large Ensemble of Climate Model Simulations

Authors :
Jan Landwehrs
Michael Wagreich
Stefan Petri
Georg Feulner
Benjamin Sames
Source :
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2021.

Abstract

The Mesozoic era (∼252 to 66 million years ago) was a key interval in Earth's evolution toward its modern state, witnessing the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea and significant biotic innovations like the early evolution of mammals. Plate tectonic dynamics drove a fundamental climatic transition from the early Mesozoic supercontinent toward the Late Cretaceous fragmented continental configuration. Here, key aspects of Mesozoic long‐term environmental changes are assessed in a climate model ensemble framework. We analyze so far the most extended ensemble of equilibrium climate states simulated for evolving Mesozoic boundary conditions covering the period from 255 to 60 Ma in 5 Myr timesteps. Global mean temperatures are generally found to be elevated above the present and exhibit a baseline warming trend driven by rising sea levels and increasing solar luminosity. Warm (Triassic and mid‐Cretaceous) and cool (Jurassic and end‐Cretaceous) anomalies result from pCO2 changes indicated by different reconstructions. Seasonal and zonal temperature contrasts as well as continental aridity show an overall decrease from the Late Triassic‐Early Jurassic to the Late Cretaceous. Meridional temperature gradients are reduced at higher global temperatures and less land area in the high latitudes. With systematic sensitivity experiments, the influence of paleogeography, sea level, vegetation patterns, pCO2, solar luminosity, and orbital configuration on these trends is investigated. For example, long‐term seasonality trends are driven by paleogeography, but orbital cycles could have had similar‐scale effects on shorter timescales. Global mean temperatures, continental humidity, and meridional temperature gradients are, however, also strongly affected by pCO2.<br />Key Points We assess global long‐term climate trends through the Mesozoic era with an ensemble of climate model simulationsVarying carbon dioxide levels cause anomalies around an overall warming trend due to changing paleogeography and increasing insolationSeasonal and zonal temperature contrasts as well as aridity decrease with time, while meridional gradients vary with paleogeography

Subjects

Subjects :
Abrupt/Rapid Climate Change
Atmospheric Science
Informatics
Surface Waves and Tides
Atmospheric Composition and Structure
Jurassic
Oceanography
Biogeosciences
Volcanic Effects
Volcano Monitoring
Cretaceous
Global Change from Geodesy
Volcanic Hazards and Risks
Oceans
Sea Level Change
Disaster Risk Analysis and Assessment
Seismology
climate modeling
Climatology
Radio Oceanography
Climate and Interannual Variability
Gravity and Isostasy
Marine Geology and Geophysics
Physical Modeling
Oceanography: General
Climate Impact
Earthquake Ground Motions and Engineering Seismology
Explosive Volcanism
Earth System Modeling
Information Related to Geologic Time
Atmospheric Processes
Cryosphere
Ocean Monitoring with Geodetic Techniques
Ocean/Atmosphere Interactions
Impacts of Global Change
Atmospheric
Geology
Regional Modeling
Oceanography: Physical
Research Article
Global Climate Models
Risk
Atmospheric Effects
Pangaea
Oceanic
Theoretical Modeling
Volcanology
Supercontinent
Hydrological Cycles and Budgets
Radio Science
Tsunamis and Storm Surges
Decadal Ocean Variability
Land/Atmosphere Interactions
Paleoceanography
Paleoclimatology
Climate Dynamics
paleoclimate
Mesozoic
Geodesy and Gravity
Global Change
Air/Sea Interactions
Numerical Modeling
Sea level
Solid Earth
Numerical Solutions
Climate Change and Variability
Geological
Effusive Volcanism
Ocean/Earth/atmosphere/hydrosphere/cryosphere interactions
Climate Variability
Water Cycles
Modeling
Paleontology
General Circulation
Policy Sciences
Avalanches
Climate Impacts
Volcano Seismology
Benefit‐cost Analysis
Triassic
Mud Volcanism
Air/Sea Constituent Fluxes
Plate tectonics
Mass Balance
Ocean influence of Earth rotation
Volcano/Climate Interactions
Climate model
Computational Geophysics
Regional Climate Change
Hydrology
Sea Level: Variations and Mean
Natural Hazards

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25724525 and 25724517
Volume :
36
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....917fc69ccbe54f9980208b14834542b0