• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: PALEO-PGEM v1.0: A statistical emulator of Pliocene-Pleistocene climate
  • Contributor: Holden, Philip B. [Author]; Edwards, Neil R. [Author]; Rangel, Thiago F. [Author]; Pereira, Elisa B. [Author]; Tran, Giang T. [Author]; Wilkinson, Richard D. [Author]
  • Published: Copernicus Publications (EGU), 2019-12-10
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-12-5137-2019
  • Origination:
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  • Description: We describe the development of the “Paleoclimate PLASIM-GENIE emulator” PALEO-PGEM and its application to derive a downscaled high-resolution spatiotemporal description of the climate of the last five million years. The 5-million-year time frame is interesting for a range of paleo-environmental questions, not least because it encompasses the evolution of humans. However, the choice of time-frame was primarily pragmatic; tectonic changes can be neglected to first order, so that it is reasonable to consider climate forcing restricted to the Earth's orbital configuration, ice-sheet state and the concentration of atmosphere CO2. The approach uses the Gaussian process emulation of the singular value decomposition of boundary-condition ensembles of the intermediate complexity atmosphere-ocean GCM PLASIM-GENIE. Spatial fields of bioclimatic variables of surface air temperature (warmest and coolest seasons) and precipitation (wettest and driest seasons) are emulated at 1,000 year intervals, driven by time-series of scalar boundary-condition forcing (CO2, orbit and ice-volume), and assuming the climate is in quasi-equilibrium. Paleoclimate anomalies at climate model resolution are interpolated onto the observed modern climatology to produce a high-resolution spatiotemporal paleoclimate reconstruction of the Pliocene-Pleistocene.
  • Access State: Open Access