Wednesday, December 25, 2013

"Small influence of solar variability on climate over the past millennium, by A.P. Schurer, S.F.B. Tett & G.C. Hegerl, Nature Geosci. (2013); doi: 10.1038/ngeo2040

Nature Geoscience, (22 December 2013); doi: 10.1038/ngeo2040

Small influence of solar variability on climate over the past millennium

Abstract

The climate of the past millennium was marked by substantial decadal and centennial scale variability in the Northern Hemisphere1. Low solar activity has been linked to cooling during the Little Ice Age (AD1450–1850; ref.  1) and there may have been solar forcing of regional warmth during the Medieval Climate Anomaly2345 (AD950–1250; ref. 1). The amplitude of the associated changes is, however, poorly constrained56, with estimates of solar forcing spanning almost an order of magnitude789. Numerical simulations tentatively indicate that a small amplitude best agrees with available temperature reconstructions10111213. Here we compare the climatic fingerprints of high and low solar forcing derived from model simulations with an ensemble of surface-air-temperature reconstructions14 for the past millennium. Our methodology15 also accounts for internal climate variability and other external drivers such as volcanic eruptions, as well as uncertainties in the proxy reconstructions and model output. We find that neither a high magnitude of solar forcing nor a strong climate effect of that forcing agree with the temperature reconstructions. We instead conclude that solar forcing probably had a minor effect on Northern Hemisphere climate over the past 1,000 years, while, volcanic eruptions and changes in greenhouse gas concentrations seem to be the most important influence over this period.
Link:  http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ngeo2040.html

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