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Past Temperatures Directly from the Greenland Ice Sheet

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TLDR
A Monte Carlo inverse method has been used on the temperature profiles measured down through the Greenland Ice Core Project (GRIP) borehole, at the summit of the Greenland ice Sheet, and the Dye 3 borehole 865 kilometers farther south, resulting in a 50, 000-year-long temperature history at GRIP and a 7000-year history at Dye3.
Abstract
A Monte Carlo inverse method has been used on the temperature profiles measured down through the Greenland Ice Core Project (GRIP) borehole, at the summit of the Greenland Ice Sheet, and the Dye 3 borehole 865 kilometers farther south. The result is a 50, 000-year-long temperature history at GRIP and a 7000-year history at Dye 3. The Last Glacial Maximum, the Climatic Optimum, the Medieval Warmth, the Little Ice Age, and a warm period at 1930 A.D. are resolved from the GRIP reconstruction with the amplitudes -23 kelvin, +2.5 kelvin, +1 kelvin, -1 kelvin, and +0.5 kelvin, respectively. The Dye 3 temperature is similar to the GRIP history but has an amplitude 1.5 times larger, indicating higher climatic variability there. The calculated terrestrial heat flow density from the GRIP inversion is 51.3 milliwatts per square meter.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Continued meltwater influence on North Atlantic Deep Water instabilities during the early Holocene

TL;DR: In this paper, high-resolution records from southern Gardar Drift, south of Iceland, show abrupt decreases in benthic foraminiferal δ13C values at discrete intervals during the early Holocene, suggesting that NADW shoaled episodically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Northern South China Sea SST changes over the last two millennia and possible linkage with solar irradiance

TL;DR: A bidecadal-resolution sea surface temperature (SST) record based on long-chain alkenones in a gravity sediment core retrieved from the northern South China Sea was reported in this article.
MonographDOI

The Stone Age of Qeqertarsuup Tunua (Disko Bugt) (Vol. 336):A regional analysis of the Saqqaq and Dorset cultures of Central West Greenland

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a solution to solve the problem of concurrence of the 2.7.7 dB.0 dB.1 dB.2 dB.5 dB.
Book ChapterDOI

Impacts and vulnerability

References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Decadal Trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: Regional Temperatures and Precipitation

TL;DR: An evaluation of the atmospheric moisture budget reveals coherent large-scale changes since 1980 that are linked to recent dry conditions over southern Europe and the Mediterranean, whereas northern Europe and parts of Scandinavia have generally experienced wetter than normal conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heat flow from the Earth's interior: Analysis of the global data set

TL;DR: In this paper, a new estimate of the Earth's heat loss based on a new global compilation of heat flow measurements comprising 24,774 observations at 20,201 sites is presented, which when areally weighted yield a global mean of 87 mW m -2 and a global heat loss of 44.2 x 10 2 W, an increase of some 4-8% over earlier estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monte Carlo sampling of solutions to inverse problems

TL;DR: In inverse problems, obtaining a maximum likelihood model is usually not sucient, as the theory linking data with model parameters is nonlinear and the a posteriori probability in the model space may not be easy to describe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arctic Environmental Change of the Last Four Centuries

TL;DR: A compilation of paleoclimate records from lake sediments, trees, glaciers, and marine sediments provides a view of circum-Arctic environmental variability over the last 400 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate instability during the last interglacial period recorded in the GRIP ice core

Roland Souchez
- 01 Jun 1993 - 
TL;DR: Isotope and chemical analyses of the GRIP ice core from Summit, central Greenland reveal that climate in Greenland during the last interglacial period was characterized by a series of severe cold periods, which began extremely rapidly and lasted from decades to centuries.
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