4.7 Article

Amplified Inception of European Little Ice Age by Sea Ice-Ocean-Atmosphere Feedbacks

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 26, Issue 19, Pages 7586-7602

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00690.1

Keywords

North Atlantic Ocean; Sea ice; Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Feedback; Paleoclimate; Coupled models

Funding

  1. National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR) Climate
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation
  3. European Commission [243908]
  4. Sinergia project FUPSOL
  5. European Commission under the Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship ECLIPS [PIEF-GA-2011-300544]

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The inception of the Little Ice Age (similar to 1400-1700 AD) is believed to have been driven by an interplay of external forcing and climate system internal variability. While the hemispheric signal seems to have been dominated by solar irradiance and volcanic eruptions, the understanding of mechanisms shaping the climate on a continental scale is less robust. In an ensemble of transient model simulations and a new type of sensitivity experiments with artificial sea ice growth, the authors identify a sea ice-ocean-atmosphere feedback mechanism that amplifies the Little Ice Age cooling in the North Atlantic-European region and produces the temperature pattern suggested by paleoclimatic reconstructions. Initiated by increasing negative forcing, the Arctic sea ice substantially expands at the beginning of the Little Ice Age. The excess of sea ice is exported to the subpolar North Atlantic, where it melts, thereby weakening convection of the ocean. Consequently, northward ocean heat transport is reduced, reinforcing the expansion of the sea ice and the cooling of the Northern Hemisphere. In the Nordic Seas, sea surface height anomalies cause the oceanic recirculation to strengthen at the expense of the warm Barents Sea inflow, thereby further reinforcing sea ice growth. The absent ocean-atmosphere heat flux in the Barents Sea results in an amplified cooling over Northern Europe. The positive nature of this feedback mechanism enables sea ice to remain in an expanded state for decades up to a century, favoring sustained cold periods over Europe such as the Little Ice Age. Support for the feedback mechanism comes from recent proxy reconstructions around the Nordic Seas.

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