Results of the sensitivity experiments LOVECLIM as NetCDF files


Autoria(s): Bakker, Pepijn; Renssen, Hans
Data(s)

27/11/2013

Resumo

Several abrupt climatic events during the present interglacial have been associated with catastrophic freshwater forcing, such as the events at 9.2and 8.2 ka BP (Alley et al., 1997; Barber et al., 1999; Marshall et al. 2007; Fleitmann et al. 2008). Proxy evidence suggests that similar events may have occurred during the last interglacial (e.g., Beets & Beets 2003; Beets et al., 2006), suggesting that freshwater-induced perturbations are an important mechanism for abrupt climate change in interglacial climates. In addition solar variability (Neff et al., 2001; Wang et al., 2005) and explosive volcanic eruptions (Crowley, 2000; Shindell et al., 2003; Jansen et al., 2007) can trigger centennial-scale climate events during interglacials and may thus have been responsible for a part of interglacial climate variability. We investigate the sensitivity of the present and last interglacial climates to realistic perturbations resulting from freshwater, solar or volcanic forcings. We will compare the differences between the two interglacial periods, between different climate models and evaluate the resulting using proxy archives.

Formato

text/tab-separated-values, 616 data points

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.823321

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.823321

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Bakker, Pepijn; Renssen, Hans (2013): Sensitivity Experiments LOVECLIM. in preparation

Palavras-Chave #-; Climate Change: Learning from the past climate; File format; File name; File size; Past4Future; Uniform resource locator/link to file; Unit; Variable
Tipo

Dataset