Sea-surface temperature reconstruction of the Quaternary western South Atlantic: New planktonic foraminiferal correlation function

2015 ◽  
Vol 425 ◽  
pp. 67-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia García Chapori ◽  
Cristiano Mazur Chiessi ◽  
Torsten Bickert ◽  
Cecilia Laprida
2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Aradhna K. Tripati ◽  
Margaret L. Delaney ◽  
James C. Zachos ◽  
Linda D. Anderson ◽  
Daniel C. Kelly ◽  
...  

Atmosphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gbèkpo Aubains Hounsou-Gbo ◽  
Jacques Servain ◽  
Moacyr Araujo ◽  
Guy Caniaux ◽  
Bernard Bourlès ◽  
...  

May-to-July and February-to-April represent peak rainy seasons in two sub-regions of Northeast Brazil (NEB): Eastern NEB and Northern NEB respectively. In this paper, we identify key oceanic indexes in the tropical South Atlantic for driving these two rainy seasons. In Eastern NEB, the May-to-July rainfall anomalies present a positive relationship with the previous boreal winter sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) in the southeast tropical Atlantic (20°–10° S; 10° W–5° E). This positive relationship, which spread westward along the southern branch of the South Equatorial Current, is associated with northwesterly surface wind anomalies. A warmer sea surface temperature in the southwestern Atlantic warm pool increases the moisture flux convergence, as well as its ascending motion and, hence, the rainfall along the adjacent coastal region. For the Northern NEB, another positive relationship is observed between the February-to-April rainfall anomalies and the SSTA of the previous boreal summer in the Atlantic Niño region (3° S–3° N; 20° W–0°). The negative remote relationship noticeable between the Northern NEB rainfall and the concomitant Pacific Niño/Niña follows cold/warm events occurring during the previous boreal summer in the eastern equatorial Atlantic. The southeastern tropical Atlantic and Atlantic Niño SSTA indexes may, then, be useful to predict seasonal rainfall over the Eastern and Northern NEB, respectively, for about a 6 month leading period. The ability of both southeastern tropical Atlantic and Atlantic Niño SSTA indexes to forecast the Eastern and Northern NEB rainfall, with about a 6 month lead time, is improved when these indexes are respectively combined with the Niño3 (5° S–5° N; 150°–90° W) and the northeast subtropical Atlantic (20° N–35° N, 45° W–20° W), mainly from the 1970’s climate shift.


1994 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 903-909
Author(s):  
S. G. Dobrovolski

Abstract. Data on the South Atlantic monthly sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) are analysed using the maximum-entropy method. It is shown that the Markov first-order process can describe, to a first approximation, SSTA series. The region of maximum SSTA values coincides with the zone of maximum residual white noise values (sub-Antarctic hydrological front). The theory of dynamic-stochastic climate models is applied to estimate the variability of South Atlantic SSTA and air-sea interactions. The Adem model is used as a deterministic block of the dynamic-stochastic model. Experiments show satisfactorily the SSTA intensification in the sub-Antarctic front zone, with appropriate standard deviations, and demonstrate the leading role of the abnormal drift currents in these processes.


2012 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. e27-e32 ◽  
Author(s):  
ARISA SEKI ◽  
YUSUKE YOKOYAMA ◽  
ATSUSHI SUZUKI ◽  
YUTA KAWAKUBO ◽  
TAKASHI OKAI ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 864-867 ◽  
pp. 2171-2174
Author(s):  
Jiong Zhu ◽  
Jian Cheng Kang

There is a correlation between sea surface temperature of the upper boundary waters and the intensity of typhoon. This paper analyzes the use of Argo float data and using inverse distance weighted interpolation method to calculate its internal regional sea surface temperature, when typhoon and other data were compared and error analysis. The results showed that: the method is reliable. When you select a point closer distance calculation and spatial distribution of Argo floats as closely as possible, the weight coefficients taken 2, known buoy number is 4-6, the relative error of calculated is less than 0.4%, RMSE error is less than 1.2 in the 0-600m depth layer


Author(s):  
Harry J Dowsett ◽  
Marci M Robinson

The Mid-Pliocene is the most recent interval of sustained global warmth, which can be used to examine conditions predicted for the near future. An accurate spatial representation of the low-latitude Mid-Pliocene Pacific surface ocean is necessary to understand past climate change in the light of forecasts of future change. Mid-Pliocene sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies show a strong contrast between the western equatorial Pacific (WEP) and eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) regardless of proxy (faunal, alkenone and Mg/Ca). All WEP sites show small differences from modern mean annual temperature, but all EEP sites show significant positive deviation from present-day temperatures by as much as 4.4°C. Our reconstruction reflects SSTs similar to modern in the WEP, warmer than modern in the EEP and eastward extension of the WEP warm pool. The east–west equatorial Pacific SST gradient is decreased, but the pole to equator gradient does not change appreciably. We find it improbable that increased greenhouse gases (GHG) alone would cause such a heterogeneous warming and more likely that the cause of Mid-Pliocene warmth is a combination of several forcings including both increased meridional heat transport and increased GHG.


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