4.7 Article

Comparison of Early-Twentieth-Century Arctic Warming and Contemporary Arctic Warming in the Light of Daily and Subdaily Data

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 35, Issue 7, Pages 2269-2290

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0162.1

Keywords

Atmosphere; Arctic; Airflow; Extreme events; Climate change; Climatology; Surface temperature; Temperature; Climate records; In situ atmospheric observations; Surface observations; Statistics; Time series; Reanalysis data; Annual variations; Climate variability; Diurnal effects

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2015/19/B/ST10/02933]
  2. Research University-Initiative of Excellence: the Emerging Field Global Environmental Changes, Climate Change Research Unit at Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun

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The main driving mechanisms behind the early-twentieth-century Arctic warming have not been fully recognized due to limited knowledge about the climate during that period. This study provides new insights into the surface air temperature conditions in the Arctic during the early-twentieth-century warming, compared to the contemporary Arctic warming. The results show that the magnitude of warming was greatest in the Pacific and Canadian Arctic regions, and the climate was more continental and less stable during the early-twentieth-century warming.
A review of many studies published since the late 1920s reveals that the main driving mechanisms responsible for the early-twentieth-century Arctic warming (ETCAW) are not fully recognized. The main obstacle seems to be our limited knowledge about the climate of this period and some forcings. A deeper knowledge based on greater spatial and temporal resolution data is needed. The article provides new (or improved) knowledge about surface air temperature (SAT) conditions (including their extreme states) in the Arctic during the ETCAW. Daily and subdaily data have been used (mean daily air temperature, maximum and minimum daily temperature, and diurnal temperature range). These were taken from 10 individual years (selected from the period 1934-50) for six meteorological stations representing parts of five Arctic climatic regions. Standard SAT characteristics were analyzed (monthly, seasonal, and yearly means), as were rarely investigated aspects of SAT characteristics (e.g., number of characteristic days, day-to-day temperature variability, and the onset, end, and duration of thermal seasons). The results were compared with analogical calculations done for data taken from the contemporary Arctic warming (CAW) period (2007-16). The Arctic experienced warming between the ETCAW and the CAW. The magnitude of warming was greatest in the Pacific (2.7 degrees C) and Canadian Arctic (1.9 degrees C) regions. A shortening of winter and lengthening of summer were noted. Furthermore, the climate was also a little more continental (except the Russian Arctic) and less stable (greater day-to-day variability and diurnal temperature range) during the ETCAW than during the CAW.

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