M
Mark A. J. Curran
Researcher at Australian Antarctic Division
Publications - 107
Citations - 6927
Mark A. J. Curran is an academic researcher from Australian Antarctic Division. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ice core & Cryosphere. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 101 publications receiving 5962 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark A. J. Curran include Cooperative Research Centre & University of Tasmania.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Continental-scale temperature variability during the past two millennia
Moinuddin Ahmed,Kevin J. Anchukaitis,Kevin J. Anchukaitis,Asfawossen Asrat,H. P. Borgaonkar,Martina Braida,Brendan M. Buckley,Ulf Büntgen,Brian M. Chase,Brian M. Chase,Duncan A. Christie,Duncan A. Christie,Edward R. Cook,Mark A. J. Curran,Mark A. J. Curran,Henry F. Diaz,Jan Esper,Ze-Xin Fan,Narayan Prasad Gaire,Quansheng Ge,Joelle Gergis,J. Fidel González-Rouco,Hugues Goosse,Stefan W. Grab,Nicholas E. Graham,Rochelle Graham,Martin Grosjean,Sami Hanhijärvi,Darrell S. Kaufman,Thorsten Kiefer,Katsuhiko Kimura,Atte Korhola,Paul J. Krusic,Antonio Lara,Antonio Lara,Anne-Marie Lézine,Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist,Andrew Lorrey,Jürg Luterbacher,Valérie Masson-Delmotte,Danny McCarroll,Joseph R. McConnell,Nicholas P. McKay,Mariano S. Morales,Andrew D. Moy,Andrew D. Moy,Robert Mulvaney,Ignacio A. Mundo,Takeshi Nakatsuka,David J. Nash,David J. Nash,Raphael Neukom,Sharon E. Nicholson,Hans Oerter,Jonathan G. Palmer,Jonathan G. Palmer,Steven J. Phipps,María Prieto,Andrés Rivera,Masaki Sano,Mirko Severi,Timothy M. Shanahan,Xuemei Shao,Feng Shi,Michael Sigl,Jason E. Smerdon,Olga Solomina,Eric J. Steig,Barbara Stenni,Meloth Thamban,Valerie Trouet,Chris S. M. Turney,Mohammed Umer,Tas van Ommen,Tas van Ommen,Dirk Verschuren,A. E. Viau,Ricardo Villalba,Bo Møllesøe Vinther,Lucien von Gunten,Sebastian Wagner,Eugene R. Wahl,Heinz Wanner,Johannes P. Werner,James W. C. White,Koh Yasue,Eduardo Zorita +86 more
TL;DR: The authors reconstructed past temperatures for seven continental-scale regions during the past one to two millennia and found that the most coherent feature in nearly all of the regional temperature reconstructions is a long-term cooling trend, which ended late in the nineteenth century.
Journal ArticleDOI
A global database of sea surface dimethylsulfide (DMS) measurements and a procedure to predict sea surface DMS as a function of latitude, longitude, and month
A. J. Kettle,Meinrat O. Andreae,David Amouroux,T. W. Andreae,Timothy S. Bates,Harald Berresheim,Heinz Bingemer,R. Boniforti,Mark A. J. Curran,Giacomo R. DiTullio,G. Helas,Graham B Jones,Maureen D. Keller,Ronald P. Kiene,Caroline Leck,Maurice Levasseur,Gillian Malin,M. Maspero,Patricia A. Matrai,A. R. McTaggart,Nikos Mihalopoulos,B. C. Nguyen,A. Novo,J. P. Putaud,Spyridon Rapsomanikis,Gregory Roberts,G. Schebeske,Sangeeta Sharma,Rafel Simó,R. Staubes,Suzanne M. Turner,G Uher +31 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a database of 15,617 point measurements of dimethylsulfide (DMS) in surface waters along with lesser amounts of data for aqueous and particulate DMS, chlorophyll concentration, sea surface salinity and temperature, and wind speed has been assembled.
Journal ArticleDOI
Observed 20th century desert dust variability: impact on climate and biogeochemistry
Natalie M. Mahowald,Silvia Kloster,Sebastian Engelstaedter,J. K. Moore,Sujoy Mukhopadhyay,Joseph R. McConnell,Samuel Albani,Samuel Albani,Scott C. Doney,Atreyee Bhattacharya,Mark A. J. Curran,Mark A. J. Curran,Mark Flanner,Forrest M. Hoffman,David M. Lawrence,Keith Lindsay,Paul Andrew Mayewski,Jason C. Neff,Daniel Rothenberg,Elizabeth R. Thomas,Peter E. Thornton,Charles S. Zender +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present observational estimates of desert dust based on pa- leodata proxies showing a doubling of the amount of dust during the 20th century over much, but not all the globe.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ice Core Evidence for Antarctic Sea Ice Decline Since the 1950s
TL;DR: A significant correlation is reported between methanesulphonic acid concentrations from a Law Dome ice core and 22 years of satellite-derived sea ice extent (SIE) for the 80°E to 140°E sector and suggests that there has been a 20% decline in SIE since about 1950.
Journal ArticleDOI
Multi-model mean nitrogen and sulfur deposition from the Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Model Intercomparison Project (ACCMIP): evaluation of historical and projected future changes
Jean-Francois Lamarque,Frank Dentener,Joseph R. McConnell,Chul-Un Ro,Mike Shaw,Robert Vet,Dan Bergmann,Philip Cameron-Smith,S. B. Dalsøren,Ruth M. Doherty,Gregory Faluvegi,S. J. Ghan,Béatrice Josse,Y. H. Lee,Ian A. MacKenzie,David A. Plummer,Drew Shindell,Ragnhild Bieltvedt Skeie,David Stevenson,Sarah A. Strode,Sarah A. Strode,Guang Zeng,Mark A. J. Curran,Dorthe Dahl-Jensen,Sarah B. Das,Diedrich Fritzsche,Matt Nolan +26 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a multi-model global dataset of nitrogen and sulfate deposition covering time periods from 1850 to 2100, calculated within the Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Model Intercomparison Project (ACCMIP).