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Last Interglacial Arctic warmth confirms polar amplification of climate change

  • Pat Anderson
  • , Ole Bennike
  • , Nancy Bigelow
  • , Julie Brigham-Grette
  • , Matt Duvall
  • , Mary Edwards
  • , Bianca Fréchette
  • , Svend Funder
  • , Sigfus Johnsen
  • , Jochen Knies
  • , Roy Koerner
  • , Anatoly Lozhkin
  • , Shawn Marshall
  • , Jens Matthiessen
  • , Glen Macdonald
  • , Gifford Miller
  • , Marisa Montoya
  • , Daniel Muhs
  • , Bette Otto-Bliesner
  • , Jonathan Overpeck
  • Niels Reeh, Hans Petter Sejrup, Robert Spielhagen, Charles Turner, Andrei Velichko
  • University of Washington
  • Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland
  • University of Alaska Fairbanks
  • University of Massachusetts
  • Bates College
  • University of Southampton
  • Université du Québec à Montréal
  • University of Copenhagen
  • Geological Survey of Norway
  • Natural Resources Canada
  • RAS - Far Eastern Branch
  • University of Calgary
  • Alfred Wegener Institute - Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research
  • University of California at Los Angeles
  • University of Colorado Boulder
  • Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
  • United States Geological Survey
  • University of Arizona
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • University of Bergen
  • Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
  • Open University Milton Keynes
  • Russian Academy of Sciences

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

239 Scopus citations

Abstract

The warmest millennia of at least the past 250,000 years occurred during the Last Interglaciation, when global ice volumes were similar to or smaller than today and systematic variations in Earth's orbital parameters aligned to produce a strong positive summer insolation anomaly throughout the Northern Hemisphere. The average insolation during the key summer months (M, J, J) was ca 11% above present across the Northern Hemisphere between 130,000 and 127,000 years ago, with a slightly greater anomaly, 13%, over the Arctic. Greater summer insolation, early penultimate deglaciation, and intensification of the North Atlantic Drift, combined to reduce Arctic Ocean sea ice, allow expansion of boreal forest to the Arctic Ocean shore across vast regions, reduce permafrost, and melt almost all glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere. Insolation, amplified by key boundary condition feedbacks, collectively produced Last Interglacial summer temperature anomalies 4-5 °C above present over most Arctic lands, significantly above the average Northern Hemisphere anomaly. The Last Interglaciation demonstrates the strength of positive feedbacks on Arctic warming and provides a potentially conservative analogue for anticipated future greenhouse warming.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1383-1400
Number of pages18
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume25
Issue number13-14
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2006

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