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Climatic Changes of the Last 18,000 Years: Observations and Model Simulations
2K
Citations
59
References
1988
Year
Future Climatic ChangeEngineeringSolar RadiationClimate ModelingEarth ScienceHoloceneModel ResultsClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityMeteorologyClimatic ChangesGeographyLast 18,000CryospherePaleoclimatologyEarth's ClimateClimatic ImpactClimatologySummer MonsoonModel SimulationsGlobal ClimateNorth America
Solar radiation changes from Earth’s axial orientation over the last 18,000 years have strongly affected tropical monsoons, mid‑latitude climates, and ice‑sheet configuration. The authors aim to compare paleoclimatic data with model simulations to evaluate mechanisms of climatic change and assess general circulation models’ predictive potential. COHMAP assembled a global, well‑dated paleoclimatic dataset and applied general‑circulation models to identify and evaluate the causes and mechanisms of climate change. The analysis shows that orbital increases in summer insolation during 12–6 k BP intensified tropical monsoons and raised lake levels in arid regions, while retreating ice sheets split the North American westerly jet, enhancing southern storms that raised lake levels and expanded woodlands in the southwestern United States, and that vegetation shifts in mid‑to‑high latitudes followed these climatic changes.
Changes in solar radiation arising from changes in the orientation of the earth's axis had pronounced effects on tropical monsoons and mid-latitude climates as well as on ice-sheet configuration during the last 18,000 years. COHMAP (Cooperative Holocene Mapping Project) has assembled a global array of well-dated paleoclimatic data and used general-circulation models to identify and evaluate causes and mechanisms of climatic change. For the northern tropics, particularly in Africa and Asia, data and model results show that the orbitally induced increase in solar radiation in summer 12,000 to 6,000 years ago enhanced the thermal contrast between land and sea and thus produced strong summer monsoons, which raised lake levels in regions that are arid today. In middle to high latitudes the climatic response to both the insolation changes and to the retreating ice sheets led to readjustments in the vegetation in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres. Model results show that the large North American ice sheet split the westerly jet stream into northern and southern branches over North America. An increase in storms associated with the southern branch helps explain high lake levels and increased woodlands in the southwestern United States during full-glacial conditions. Comparisons of paleoclimatic data with the model simulations are important because models provide a theoretical framework for evaluating mechanisms of climatic change, and such comparisons help to evaluate the potential of general circulation models for predicting future climates.
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