Quantifying Structural Uncertainty in Paleoclimate Data Assimilation With an Application to the Last Millennium

Daniel E. Amrhein, Gregory J. Hakim, Luke A. Parsons

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21 Scopus citations

Abstract

Paleoclimate reconstruction relies on estimates of spatiotemporal relationships among climate quantities to interpolate between proxy data. This work quantifies how structural uncertainties in those relationships translate to uncertainties in reconstructions of past climate. We develop and apply a data assimilation uncertainty quantification approach to paleoclimate networks and observational uncertainties representative of data for the last millennium. We find that structural uncertainties arising from uncertain spatial covariance relationships typically contribute 10% of the total uncertainty in reconstructed temperature variability at small (∼200 km), continental, and hemispheric length scales, with larger errors (50% or larger) in regions where long-range climate covariances are least certain. These structural uncertainties contribute far more to errors in uncertainty quantification, sometimes by a factor of 5 or higher. Accounting for and reducing uncertainties in climate model dynamics and resulting covariance relationships will improve paleoclimate reconstruction accuracy.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2020GL090485
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume47
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 28 2020

Keywords

  • data assimilation
  • Last Millennium
  • paleoclimatology
  • uncertainty quantification

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