open access publication

Preprint, 2024

Shifts in Greenland interannual climate variability lead Dansgaard-Oeschger abrupt warming by hundreds of years

EGUsphere, Volume 2024, Pages 1-24, 10.5194/egusphere-2024-1003

Contributors

Brashear, Chloe A [1] Jones, Tyler R 0000-0003-1871-2105 [1] Morris, Valerie A 0000-0002-8105-585X [1] Vaughn, Bruce H 0000-0001-6503-957X [1] Roberts, William Henry Gordon 0000-0002-8249-1901 [2] Skorski, William B [1] Hughes, Abigail G 0000-0002-2776-7274 [1] Nunn, Richard M [3] Rasmussen, Sune Olander 0000-0002-4177-3611 [4] Cuffey, Kurt M [5] Vinther, Bo Møllesøe 0000-0002-6078-771X [4] Sowers, Todd A [6] Buizert, Christo [7] Gkinis, Vasileios 0000-0002-5910-1549 [4] Holme, Christian Terkelsen 0000-0003-2155-489X [4] Jensen, Mari F 0000-0002-0344-1827 [8] Kjellman, Sofia E 0000-0003-1165-8601 [9] Langebroek, Petra M 0000-0002-1246-8781 [8] Mekhaldi, Florian 0000-0001-8323-2955 [10] Rozmiarek, Kevin S 0000-0002-4065-8259 [1] Rheinlænder, Jonathan Winfield 0000-0002-2544-2900 [8] Simon, Margit Hildegard 0000-0002-3150-3220 [8] Sinnl, Giulia 0000-0003-1590-315X [4] Smith-Johnsen, Silje 0000-0001-5051-055X [8] White, James W C [11]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
  2. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  3. [2] Northumbria University
  4. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  5. [3] National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility
  6. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  7. [4] University of Copenhagen
  8. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  9. [5] University of California, Berkeley
  10. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];

Abstract

During the Last Glacial Period (LGP), Greenland experienced approximately thirty abrupt warming phases, known as Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) Events, followed by cooling back to baseline glacial conditions. Studies of mean climate change across warming transitions reveal indistinguishable phase-offsets between shifts in temperature, dust, sea salt, accumulation and moisture source, thus preventing a comprehensive understanding of the “anatomy” of D-O cycles (Capron et al,. 2021). One aspect of abrupt change that has not been systematically assessed is how high-frequency, interannual-scale climatic variability surrounding mean temperature changes across D-O transitions. Here, we utilize the EGRIP ice core high-resolution water isotope record, a proxy for temperature and atmospheric circulation, to quantify the amplitude of 7–15 year isotopic variability for D-O events 2–13, the Younger Dryas and the Bølling-Allerød. On average, cold stadial periods consistently exhibit greater variability than warm interstadial periods. Most notably, we often find that reductions in the amplitude of the 7–15 year band led abrupt D-O warmings by hundreds of years. Such a large phase offset between two climate parameters in a Greenland ice core has never been documented for D-O cycles. However, similar centennial lead times have been found in proxies of Norwegian Sea ice cover relative to abrupt Greenland warming (Sadatzki et al., 2020). Using HadCM3, a fully coupled general circulation model, we assess the effects of sea ice on 7–15 year temperature variability at EGRIP. For a range of stadial and interstadial conditions, we find a strong relationship in line with our observations between colder simulated mean temperature and enhanced temperature variability at the EGRIP location. We also find a robust correlation between year-to-year North Atlantic sea-ice fluctuations and the strength of interannual-scale temperature variability at EGRIP. Thus, both paleoclimate proxy evidence and model simulations suggest that sea ice plays a substantial role in high-frequency climate variability prior to D-O warming. This provides a clue about the anatomy of D-O Events and should be the target of future sea-ice model studies.

Keywords

Bolling-Allerod, D-O events, Dansgaard–Oeschger, Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles, Dryas, EGRIP, Event 2, Greenland, Greenland ice cores, Greenland warming, HadCM3, LGP, Younger, Younger Dryas, abrupt warming, accumulation, amplitude, anatomy, atmospheric circulation, band, baseline, changes, circulation, circulation model, climate, climate change, climate variability, climatic parameters, colder, comprehensive understanding, conditions, core, correlation, cycle, dust, effect, effect of sea ice, events, evidence, fluctuations, general circulation model, glacial conditions, high-frequency, ice, ice cores, interannual climate variability, interstadial conditions, interstadial periods, isotope records, isotopic variability, lead, lead time, location, mean temperature, model, model simulations, modeling studies, moisture, moisture sources, observations, offset, paleoclimate, paleoclimate proxy evidence, parameters, period, phase, phase offset, proxies, proxy evidence, records, reduction, relationship, salt, sea, sea ice, sea salt, sea-ice, sea-ice fluctuations, shift, simulation, source, stadial periods, stadials, strength, study, target, temperature, temperature changes, temperature variability, time, transition, understanding, variables, warm interstadial periods, warm phase, warm transition, warming, water isotope records, year band, years

Funders

  • Directorate for Geosciences

Data Provider: Digital Science