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The DeepMIP contribution to PMIP4: methodologies for selection, compilation and analysis of latest Paleocene and early Eocene climate proxy data, incorporating version 0.1 of the DeepMIP database

Authors :
Christopher J. Hollis
Tom Dunkley Jones
Eleni Anagnostou
Peter K. Bijl
Margot J. Cramwinckel
Ying Cui
Gerald R. Dickens
Kirsty M. Edgar
Yvette Eley
David Evans
Gavin L. Foster
Joost Frieling
Gordon N. Inglis
Elizabeth M. Kennedy
Reinhard Kozdon
Vittoria Lauretano
Caroline H. Lear
Kate Littler
Nele Meckler
B. David A. Naafs
Heiko Pälike
Richard D. Pancost
Paul Pearson
Dana L. Royer
Ulrich Salzmann
Brian Schubert
Hannu Seebeck
Appy Sluijs
Robert Speijer
Peter Stassen
Jessica Tierney
Aradhna Tripati
Bridget Wade
Thomas Westerhold
Caitlyn Witkowski
James C. Zachos
Yi Ge Zhang
Matthew Huber
Daniel J. Lunt
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2019.

Abstract

The early Eocene (56 to 48 million years ago) is inferred to have been the most recent time that Earth's atmospheric CO2 concentrations exceeded 1000 ppm. Global mean temperatures were also substantially warmer than present day. As such, study of early Eocene climate provides insight into how a super-warm Earth system behaves and offers an opportunity to evaluate climate models under conditions of high greenhouse gas forcing. The Deep Time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP) is a systematic model-model and model-data intercomparison of three early Paleogne time slices: latest Paleocene, Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum and early Eocene climatic optimum. A previous article outlined the model experimental design for climate model simulations. In this article, we outline the methodologies to be used for the compilation and analysis of climate proxy data, primarily proxies for temperature and CO2. This paper establishes the protocols for a concerted and coordinated effort to compile the climate proxy records across a wide geographic range. The resulting climate atlas will be used to constrain and evaluate climate models for the three selected time intervals, and provide insights into the mechanisms that control these warm climate states. We provide version 0.1 of this database, in anticipation that this will be expanded in subsequent publications.

Subjects

Subjects :
F800

Details

ISSN :
1991962X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f117f44252a3bf48d7c81392b5cf1fc8