Towards more physically constrained freshwater injection via eddy permitting simulations of the last glacial cycle

Author(s):  
Ryan Love ◽  
Heather Andres ◽  
Alan Condron ◽  
Xu Zhang ◽  
Gerrit Lohmann ◽  
...  

<p>Freshwater, in the form of glacial runoff, is hypothesized to play a critical role in centennial to millennial scale climate variability, eg. the Younger Dryas and Dansgaard Oeschger events. Freshwater injection, or hosing, model experiments demonstrate that freshwater has the capability to generate abrupt climate transitions.  However, in an attempt to mitigate the inability of most models to resolve the smaller-scale features relevant to freshwater transport (such as boundary currents and mesoscale eddies), these hosing experiments commonly apply the entirety of the freshwater directly to the regions of deepwater formation (DWF). Our results indicate that this can inflate the freshwater signal in those regions by as much as four times. We propose a novel method of freshwater injection for such low-resolution models that spatially distributes the freshwater in accord with the results of eddy-permitting modelling. Furthermore, this “freshwater fingerprint” method not only impacts the timing of simulated climate transitions but also can allow us to evaluate how much we are overestimating the effects of freshwater when injected directly into sites of DWF.</p><p> </p><p>The freshwater fingerprints we develop are based on a suite of freshwater injection experiments performed using an eddy permitting Younger Dryas configuration of the MITGCM. Freshwater injection locations include the Mackenzie River, Gulf of St. Lawrence, Gulf of Mexico and a location off the coast of Norway, with flux amounts bounded by glacial reconstructions. These simulations indicate that freshwater from the Mackenzie River and Fennoscandia have the largest impact on salinity in most of the conventional sites of DWF (GIN and Labrador Seas, and in these simulations, predominantly the northern North Atlantic due to extensive sea ice), while freshwater from the Gulf of St. Lawrence is effective at freshening only the northern North Atlantic. The Gulf of Mexico has little impact on any DWF region we consider, mostly because the lower but continual flux in our simulations does not allow freshwater to penetrate northward past the Gulf Stream. The dilution of the freshwater signal as it is transported from the site of injection to the DWF zones leads to a reduction in the effective freshwater forcing, making hosing directly over DWF zones even with realistic freshwater amounts unrealistic. Thus, we construct freshwater fingerprints from these simulations by extracting the freshwater anomaly spatial pattern averaged over the last 5 simulation years, vertically integrating the field and normalizing it.</p><p><br>The freshwater fingerprint is then implemented in the COSMOS Earth Systems Model, which is run at resolutions typical for paleoclimate simulations (non-eddy permitting). Initial results show that freshwater from the Mackenzie River using our  fingerprint method leads to a more gradual cooling than if the meltwater is released directly over the hosing region (50-70N). We conclude that hosing over DWF zones, even with realistic freshwater amounts, produces an unrealistically large climate response. Additional results for the remaining injection locations and with the fingerprint implemented in a simpler climate model will be presented.</p>


1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (9) ◽  
pp. 1333-1336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna María Ágústsdóttir ◽  
Richard B. Alley ◽  
David Pollard ◽  
William H. Peterson


1997 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Fawcett ◽  
Anna Maria Ágústsdóttir ◽  
Richard B. Alley ◽  
Christopher A. Shuman


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan Love ◽  
Heather Andres ◽  
Alan Condron ◽  
Lev Tarasov

Abstract. Freshwater, in the form of glacial runoff, is hypothesized to play a critical role in centennial to millennial scale climate variability such as the Younger Dryas and Dansgaard-Oeschger Events. Indeed, freshwater injection/hosing experiments with climate models have long shown that freshwater has the capability of generating such abrupt climate transitions. However, the relationship between freshwater and abrupt climate transitions is not straightforward. Large-scale glacial runoff events, such as Meltwater Pulse 1A, are not always temporally proximal to subsequent large-scale cooling. As well, the typical design of hosing experiments tends to artificially amplify the climate response. This study explores the impact that limitations in the representation of runoff in conventional hosing simulations has on our understanding of this relationship and addresses the more fundamental question of where coastally released freshwater is transported when it reaches the ocean. We focus particularly on the prior use of excessive freshwater volumes (often by a factor of 5) and present-day (rather than paleo) ocean gateways, as well as the injection of freshwater directly over sites of deep-water formation (DWF) rather than at runoff locations. We track the routing of glaciologically-constrained freshwater volumes from four different plausible injection locations in a suite of eddy-permitting glacial ocean simulations using MITGCM under both open and closed Bering Strait conditions. Restricting freshwater forcing values to realistic ranges results in less spreading of freshwater across the North Atlantic and indicates that the response of DWF depends strongly on the geographical location of meltwater input. In particular, freshwater released into the Gulf of Mexico has little impact on DWF regions as a result of turbulent mixing by the Gulf Stream. In contrast, freshwater released from the Eurasian Ice sheet or initially into the Arctic is found to have the largest impact on DWF in the North Atlantic and GIN seas. Additional experiments show that when the Bering Strait is open, much like present-day, the Mackenzie River source exhibits twice as much freshening of the Labrador sea as a closed Bering Strait. Finally, our results illustrate that applying a freshwater hosing directly into the North Atlantic with even realistic freshwater amounts still over-estimates the effect of terrestrial runoff on ocean circulation.



Science ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 363 (6426) ◽  
pp. 516-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Lozier ◽  
F. Li ◽  
S. Bacon ◽  
F. Bahr ◽  
A. S. Bower ◽  
...  

To provide an observational basis for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projections of a slowing Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (MOC) in the 21st century, the Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program (OSNAP) observing system was launched in the summer of 2014. The first 21-month record reveals a highly variable overturning circulation responsible for the majority of the heat and freshwater transport across the OSNAP line. In a departure from the prevailing view that changes in deep water formation in the Labrador Sea dominate MOC variability, these results suggest that the conversion of warm, salty, shallow Atlantic waters into colder, fresher, deep waters that move southward in the Irminger and Iceland basins is largely responsible for overturning and its variability in the subpolar basin.



2015 ◽  
Vol 65 (8) ◽  
pp. 1079-1093 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annika Drews ◽  
Richard J. Greatbatch ◽  
Hui Ding ◽  
Mojib Latif ◽  
Wonsun Park


2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 2811-2842 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Chandler ◽  
L. E. Sohl ◽  
J. A. Jonas ◽  
H. J. Dowsett

Abstract. Climate reconstructions of the mid-Pliocene Warm Period (mPWP) bear many similarities to aspects of future global warming as projected by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In particular, marine and terrestrial paleoclimate data point to high latitude temperature amplification, with associated decreases in sea ice and land ice and altered vegetation distributions that show expansion of warmer climate biomes into higher latitudes. NASA GISS climate models have been used to study the Pliocene climate since the USGS PRISM project first identified that the mid-Pliocene North Atlantic sea surface temperatures were anomalously warm. Here we present the most recent simulations of the Pliocene using the AR5/CMIP5 version of the GISS Earth System Model known as ModelE2-R. These simulations constitute the NASA contribution to the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP) Experiment 2. Many findings presented here corroborate results from other PlioMIP multi-model ensemble papers, but we also emphasize features in the ModelE2-R simulations that are unlike the ensemble means. We provide discussion of features that show considerable improvement compared with simulations from previous versions of the NASA GISS models, improvement defined here as simulation results that more closely resemble the ocean core data as well as the PRISM3D reconstructions of the mid-Pliocene climate. In some regions even qualitative agreement between model results and paleodata are an improvement over past studies, but the dramatic warming in the North Atlantic and Greenland-Iceland-Norwegian Sea in these new simulations is by far the most accurate portrayal ever of this key geographic region by the GISS climate model. Our belief is that continued development of key physical routines in the atmospheric model, along with higher resolution and recent corrections to mixing parameterizations in the ocean model, have led to an Earth System Model that will produce more accurate projections of future climate.





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