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The Ross Sea Dipole - temperature, snow accumulation and sea ice variability in the Ross Sea region, Antarctica, over the past 2700 Years

Authors :
Bertler, Nancy A.N.
Conway, Howard
Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe
Emanuelsson, Daniel B.
Winstrup, Mai
Vallelonga, Paul T.
Lee, James E.
Brook, Ed J.
Severinghaus, Jeffrey P.
Fudge, Taylor J.
Keller, Elizabeth D.
Baisden, W. Troy
Hindmarsh, Richard C.A.
Neff, Peter D.
Blunier, Thomas
Edwards, Ross
Mayewski, Paul A.
Kipfstuhl, Sepp
Buizert, Christo
Canessa, Silvia
Dadic, Ruzica
Kjær, Helle A.
Kurbatov, Andrei
Zhang, Dongqi
Waddington, Ed D.
Baccolo, Giovanni
Beers, Thomas
Brightley, Hannah J.
Carter, Lionel
Clemens-Sewall, David
Ciobanu, Viorela G.
Delmonte, Barbara
Eling, Lukas
Ellis, Aja A.
Ganesh, Shruthi
Golledge, Nicholas R.
Haines, Skylar A.
Handley, Michael
Hawley, Robert L.
Hogan, Chad M.
Johnson, Katelyn M.
Korotkikh, Elena
Lowry, Daniel P.
Mandeno, Darcy
McKay, Robert M.
Menking, James A.
Naish, Timothy R.
Noerling, Caroline
Ollive, Agathe
Orsi, Anaïs
Proemse, Bernadette C.
Pyne, Alexander R.
Pyne, Rebecca L.
Renwick, James
Scherer, Reed P.
Semper, Stefanie
Simonsen, Marius
Sneed, Sharon B.
Steig, Eric J.
Tuohy, Andrea
Ulayottil Venugopal, Abhijith
Valero-Delgado, Fernando
Venkatesh, Janani
Wang, Feitang
Wang, Shimeng
Winski, Dominic A.
Winton, Victoria H.L.
Whiteford, Arran
Xiao, Cunde
Yang, Jiao
Zhang, Xin
Bertler, Nancy A.N.
Conway, Howard
Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe
Emanuelsson, Daniel B.
Winstrup, Mai
Vallelonga, Paul T.
Lee, James E.
Brook, Ed J.
Severinghaus, Jeffrey P.
Fudge, Taylor J.
Keller, Elizabeth D.
Baisden, W. Troy
Hindmarsh, Richard C.A.
Neff, Peter D.
Blunier, Thomas
Edwards, Ross
Mayewski, Paul A.
Kipfstuhl, Sepp
Buizert, Christo
Canessa, Silvia
Dadic, Ruzica
Kjær, Helle A.
Kurbatov, Andrei
Zhang, Dongqi
Waddington, Ed D.
Baccolo, Giovanni
Beers, Thomas
Brightley, Hannah J.
Carter, Lionel
Clemens-Sewall, David
Ciobanu, Viorela G.
Delmonte, Barbara
Eling, Lukas
Ellis, Aja A.
Ganesh, Shruthi
Golledge, Nicholas R.
Haines, Skylar A.
Handley, Michael
Hawley, Robert L.
Hogan, Chad M.
Johnson, Katelyn M.
Korotkikh, Elena
Lowry, Daniel P.
Mandeno, Darcy
McKay, Robert M.
Menking, James A.
Naish, Timothy R.
Noerling, Caroline
Ollive, Agathe
Orsi, Anaïs
Proemse, Bernadette C.
Pyne, Alexander R.
Pyne, Rebecca L.
Renwick, James
Scherer, Reed P.
Semper, Stefanie
Simonsen, Marius
Sneed, Sharon B.
Steig, Eric J.
Tuohy, Andrea
Ulayottil Venugopal, Abhijith
Valero-Delgado, Fernando
Venkatesh, Janani
Wang, Feitang
Wang, Shimeng
Winski, Dominic A.
Winton, Victoria H.L.
Whiteford, Arran
Xiao, Cunde
Yang, Jiao
Zhang, Xin
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

High-resolution, well-dated climate archives provide an opportunity to investigate the dynamic interactions of climate patterns relevant for future projections. Here, we present data from a new, annually-dated ice core record from the eastern Ross Sea. Comparison of the Roosevelt Island Climate Evolution (RICE) ice core records with climate reanalysis data for the 1979–2012 calibration period shows that RICE records reliably capture temperature and snow precipitation variability of the region. RICE is compared with data from West Antarctica (West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide Ice Core) and the western (Talos Dome) and eastern (Siple Dome) Ross Sea. For most of the past 2,700 years, the eastern Ross Sea was warming with perhaps increased snow accumulation and decreased sea ice extent. However, West Antarctica cooled whereas the western Ross Sea showed no significant temperature trend. From the 17th Century onwards, this relationship changes. All three regions now show signs of warming, with snow accumulation declining in West Antarctica and the eastern Ross Sea, but increasing in the western Ross Sea. Analysis of decadal to centennial-scale climate variability superimposed on the longer term trend reveal that periods characterised by opposing temperature trends between the Eastern and Western Ross Sea have occurred since the 3rd Century but are masked by longer-term trends. This pattern here is referred to as the Ross Sea Dipole, caused by a sensitive response of the region to dynamic interactions of the Southern Annual Mode and tropical forcings.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363210453
Document Type :
Electronic Resource