European Centre of Research and Teaching in Geosciences of Environment, UMR 6635 Aix-Marseille University/CNRS, Aix-en-Provence, France.
PLoS One. 2010 Apr 1;5(4):e9972. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009972.
The lack of instrumental data before the mid-19th-century limits our understanding of present warming trends. In the absence of direct measurements, we used proxies that are natural or historical archives recording past climatic changes. A gridded reconstruction of spring-summer temperature was produced for Europe based on tree-rings, documentaries, pollen assemblages and ice cores. The majority of proxy series have an annual resolution. For a better inference of long-term climate variation, they were completed by low-resolution data (decadal or more), mostly on pollen and ice-core data.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: An original spectral analog method was devised to deal with this heterogeneous dataset, and to preserve long-term variations and the variability of temperature series. So we can replace the recent climate changes in a broader context of the past 1400 years. This preservation is possible because the method is not based on a calibration (regression) but on similarities between assemblages of proxies. The reconstruction of the April-September temperatures was validated with a Jack-knife technique. It was also compared to other spatially gridded temperature reconstructions, literature data, and glacier advance and retreat curves. We also attempted to relate the spatial distribution of European temperature anomalies to known solar and volcanic forcings.
We found that our results were accurate back to 750. Cold periods prior to the 20(th) century can be explained partly by low solar activity and/or high volcanic activity. The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) could be correlated to higher solar activity. During the 20(th) century, however only anthropogenic forcing can explain the exceptionally high temperature rise. Warm periods of the Middle Age were spatially more heterogeneous than last decades, and then locally it could have been warmer. However, at the continental scale, the last decades were clearly warmer than any period of the last 1400 years. The heterogeneity of MWP versus the homogeneity of the last decades is likely an argument that different forcings could have operated. These results support the fact that we are living a climate change in Europe never seen in the past 1400 years.
19 世纪中期之前缺乏仪器数据,这限制了我们对当前变暖趋势的理解。在没有直接测量的情况下,我们使用了记录过去气候变化的自然或历史档案作为代理。基于树木年轮、文献记录、花粉组合和冰芯,我们为欧洲制作了一个春季-夏季温度的网格化重建。大多数代理系列具有年度分辨率。为了更好地推断长期气候变化,他们使用低分辨率数据(十年或更长时间)进行补充,主要是花粉和冰芯数据。
方法/主要发现:为了处理这种异构数据集,并保留长期变化和温度序列的可变性,我们设计了一种原始的光谱模拟方法。因此,我们可以将最近的气候变化置于过去 1400 年的更广泛背景下。这种保留是可能的,因为该方法不是基于校准(回归),而是基于代理集合之间的相似性。使用 Jack-knife 技术对 4 月至 9 月的温度进行了重建验证。还将其与其他空间网格化温度重建、文献数据以及冰川前进和后退曲线进行了比较。我们还试图将欧洲温度异常的空间分布与已知的太阳和火山强迫联系起来。
我们发现我们的结果可以追溯到 750 年。20 世纪之前的寒冷时期可以部分归因于太阳活动减弱和/或火山活动增加。中世纪暖期(MWP)可能与太阳活动增加有关。然而,在 20 世纪,只有人为强迫才能解释异常高的升温。中世纪的温暖时期在空间上比最近几十年更加不均匀,因此在某些地方可能更温暖。然而,在大陆尺度上,过去几十年明显比过去 1400 年的任何时期都更温暖。MWP 的不均匀性与最近几十年的均匀性可能是不同的强迫因素可能起作用的论点。这些结果支持了这样一个事实,即在过去 1400 年中,欧洲从未经历过我们现在所经历的气候变化。