On the causes of mid-Pliocene warmth and polar amplification

Daniel Lunt, Alan Haywood, Gavin Schmidt, Ulrich Salzmann, Paul Valdes, Harry Dowsett, Claire Loptson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

80 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The mid-Pliocene (~ 3 to 3.3 Ma ago), is a period of sustained global warmth in comparison to the late Quaternary (0 to ~ 1 Ma ago), and has potential to inform predictions of long-term future climate change. However, given that several processes potentially contributed, relatively little is understood about the reasons for the observed warmth, or the associated polar amplification. Here, using a modelling approach and a novel factorisation method, we assess the relative contributions to mid-Pliocene warmth from: elevated CO2, lowered orography, and vegetation and ice sheet changes. The results show that on a global scale, the largest contributor to mid-Pliocene warmth is elevated CO2. However, in terms of polar amplification, changes to ice sheets contribute significantly in the Southern Hemisphere, and orographic changes contribute significantly in the Northern Hemisphere. We also carry out an energy balance analysis which indicates that that on a global scale, surface albedo and atmospheric emmissivity changes dominate over cloud changes. We investigate the sensitivity of our results to uncertainties in the prescribed CO2 and orographic changes, to derive uncertainty ranges for the various contributing processes.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)128-138
JournalEarth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume321-32
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2012

Keywords

  • mid-Pliocene
  • polar amplification
  • paleoclimate modelling

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