Salta al contenuto principale
Passa alla visualizzazione normale.

ALESSANDRO INCARBONA

Globally coherent water cycle response to temperature change during the past two millennia

  • Autori: Konecky BL; McKay NP; Falster GM; Stevenson SL; Fischer MJ; Atwood AR; Thompson DM; Jones MD; Tyler JJ; DeLong KL; Martrat B; Thomas EK; Conroy JL; Dee SG; Jonkers L; Churakova OV; Kern Z; Opel T; Porter TJ; Sayani HR; Skrzypek G; Abram NJ; Braun K; Carré M; Cartapanis O; Comas-Bru L; Curran MA; Dassié EP; Divine DV; Incarbona A; Kaufman DS; Kaushal N; Klaebe RM; Kolus HR; Leduc G; Managave SR; Mortyn PG; Moy AD; Orsi AJ; Partin JW; Roop HA; Sicre M-A; von Gunten L; Yoshimura K
  • Anno di pubblicazione: 2023
  • Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/621813

Abstract

The response of the global water cycle to changes in global surface temperature remains an outstanding question in future climate projections and in past climate reconstructions. The stable hydrogen and oxygen isotope compositions of precipitation (δprecip), meteoric water (δMW) and seawater (δSW) integrate processes from microphysical to global scales and thus are uniquely positioned to track global hydroclimate variations. Here we evaluate global hydroclimate during the past 2,000 years using a globally distributed compilation of proxies for δprecip, δMW and δSW. We show that global mean surface temperature exerted a coherent influence on global δprecip and δMW throughout the past two millennia, driven by global ocean evaporation and condensation processes, with lower values during the Little Ice Age (1450–1850) and higher values after the onset of anthropogenic warming (~1850). The Pacific Walker Circulation is a predominant source of regional variability, particularly since 1850. Our results demonstrate rapid adjustments in global precipitation and atmospheric circulation patterns—within decades—as the planet warms and cools.