Literature DB >> 22914090

Recent Antarctic Peninsula warming relative to Holocene climate and ice-shelf history.

Robert Mulvaney1, Nerilie J Abram, Richard C A Hindmarsh, Carol Arrowsmith, Louise Fleet, Jack Triest, Louise C Sime, Olivier Alemany, Susan Foord.   

Abstract

Rapid warming over the past 50 years on the Antarctic Peninsula is associated with the collapse of a number of ice shelves and accelerating glacier mass loss. In contrast, warming has been comparatively modest over West Antarctica and significant changes have not been observed over most of East Antarctica, suggesting that the ice-core palaeoclimate records available from these areas may not be representative of the climate history of the Antarctic Peninsula. Here we show that the Antarctic Peninsula experienced an early-Holocene warm period followed by stable temperatures, from about 9,200 to 2,500 years ago, that were similar to modern-day levels. Our temperature estimates are based on an ice-core record of deuterium variations from James Ross Island, off the northeastern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. We find that the late-Holocene development of ice shelves near James Ross Island was coincident with pronounced cooling from 2,500 to 600 years ago. This cooling was part of a millennial-scale climate excursion with opposing anomalies on the eastern and western sides of the Antarctic Peninsula. Although warming of the northeastern Antarctic Peninsula began around 600 years ago, the high rate of warming over the past century is unusual (but not unprecedented) in the context of natural climate variability over the past two millennia. The connection shown here between past temperature and ice-shelf stability suggests that warming for several centuries rendered ice shelves on the northeastern Antarctic Peninsula vulnerable to collapse. Continued warming to temperatures that now exceed the stable conditions of most of the Holocene epoch is likely to cause ice-shelf instability to encroach farther southward along the Antarctic Peninsula.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22914090     DOI: 10.1038/nature11391

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  9 in total

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-11-14       Impact factor: 11.205

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-08-04       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  One-to-one coupling of glacial climate variability in Greenland and Antarctica.

Authors: 
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6.  Warming of the Antarctic ice-sheet surface since the 1957 International Geophysical Year.

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  9 in total
  28 in total

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6.  Divergent trophic responses of sympatric penguin species to historic anthropogenic exploitation and recent climate change.

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7.  Middle Holocene expansion of Pacific Deep Water into the Southern Ocean.

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9.  The role of temperature in determining species' vulnerability to ocean acidification: a case study using Mytilus galloprovincialis.

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10.  Improved estimates of preindustrial biomass burning reduce the magnitude of aerosol climate forcing in the Southern Hemisphere.

Authors:  Pengfei Liu; Jed O Kaplan; Loretta J Mickley; Yang Li; Nathan J Chellman; Monica M Arienzo; John K Kodros; Jeffrey R Pierce; Michael Sigl; Johannes Freitag; Robert Mulvaney; Mark A J Curran; Joseph R McConnell
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