School of Earth and Environment, Earth and Environment Building, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci. 2011 Mar 13;369(1938):933-56. doi: 10.1098/rsta.2010.0317.
Given the inherent uncertainties in predicting how climate and environments will respond to anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases, it would be beneficial to society if science could identify geological analogues to the human race's current grand climate experiment. This has been a focus of the geological and palaeoclimate communities over the last 30 years, with many scientific papers claiming that intervals in Earth history can be used as an analogue for future climate change. Using a coupled ocean-atmosphere modelling approach, we test this assertion for the most probable pre-Quaternary candidates of the last 100 million years: the Mid- and Late Cretaceous, the Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), the Early Eocene, as well as warm intervals within the Miocene and Pliocene epochs. These intervals fail as true direct analogues since they either represent equilibrium climate states to a long-term CO(2) forcing--whereas anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases provide a progressive (transient) forcing on climate--or the sensitivity of the climate system itself to CO(2) was different. While no close geological analogue exists, past warm intervals in Earth history provide a unique opportunity to investigate processes that operated during warm (high CO(2)) climate states. Palaeoclimate and environmental reconstruction/modelling are facilitating the assessment and calculation of the response of global temperatures to increasing CO(2) concentrations in the longer term (multiple centuries); this is now referred to as the Earth System Sensitivity, which is critical in identifying CO(2) thresholds in the atmosphere that must not be crossed to avoid dangerous levels of climate change in the long term. Palaeoclimatology also provides a unique and independent way to evaluate the qualities of climate and Earth system models used to predict future climate.
鉴于预测气候和环境对人为温室气体排放的响应存在固有不确定性,如果科学能够找到与人类当前大规模气候实验类似的地质案例,这将对社会有益。在过去的 30 年中,地质和古气候界一直关注这一问题,许多科学论文声称,地球历史上的某些时期可以作为未来气候变化的类比。我们使用耦合的海洋-大气建模方法,对过去 1 亿年中最有可能的前第四纪候选期进行了测试:中-晚白垩世、古新世-始新世极热事件(PETM)、早始新世以及中新世和上新世时期的温暖期。这些时期不能作为真正的直接类比,因为它们要么代表长期 CO2 强迫下的平衡气候状态——而人为温室气体排放对气候提供了渐进(瞬态)强迫——要么气候系统本身对 CO2 的敏感性不同。虽然不存在紧密的地质类比,但地球历史上过去的温暖时期为研究在温暖(高 CO2)气候条件下运行的过程提供了独特的机会。古气候和环境重建/建模正在促进对全球温度对 CO2 浓度增加的长期(多个世纪)响应的评估和计算;这现在被称为地球系统敏感性,对于确定大气中不能超过以避免长期气候变化达到危险水平的 CO2 阈值至关重要。古气候学还为评估用于预测未来气候的气候和地球系统模型的质量提供了独特且独立的方法。