News Release
Linking Climate Change Across Time Scales
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
May 18, 2006
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
What do month-to-month changes in temperature have to do with
century-to-century changes in temperature? At first it
might seem like not much. But in a report published in this
week’s Nature,
scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
(WHOI) have found some unifying themes in the global variations of
temperature at time scales ranging from a single season to hundreds of
thousands of years. These findings help place climate observed at
individual places and times into a larger global and temporal context.
“Much of the work went into assembling the different types of records
needed to study such diverse time scales”, said Peter Huybers, a
paleoclimatologist in the Geology and Geophysics Department at WHOI and
lead author on the study. “Data from instruments from around the
world are available for recent periods, but it is not so easy for
earlier times. We have few instrumental records before the 19th
century, so we have to use measurements in corals, ice cores, and
sediment cores to estimate past temperatures”.
These measurements and data compilations were made by scientists at
WHOI and other research institutions. “While none of the measurements
we use are new,” Huybers said, “putting them together told us more than
we could learn from any single record.”
Huybers and coauthor William Curry, a senior scientist and
paleoceanographer at WHOI, found that temperature variations are more
intimately linked across time scales than had previously been
thought. For example, places that have a large annual cycle
in temperature, like the high latitudes, also have a lot of interannual
and decadal temperature variability. In fact, the relationship is
so strong Huybers says you can fairly well predict how much decadal temperature
change occurs at a given location simply by knowing the size of the
annual cycle.
At longer time scales, however, a different
relationship seems to hold. Temperature variations at thousands and
tens of thousands of years seem to follow temperature variations at the
Milankovitch cycles. Milankovitch cycles are named after the
Serbian mathematician Milutin Milankovitch, who argued that periodic
changes in the Earth's orbit around the Sun cause the advance and
retreat of massive ice sheets. The changes in Earth’s orbit
cause redistributions in how much sunlight the Earth receives at
different locations and seasons.
“The overall impression is that energy is put into
the climate system at the annual and Milankovitch time scales, causing
temperature variations at those time scales, but also at the
neighboring time scales” said Huybers. In the tropics the
amplitude of the annual and
Milankovitch cycles tends to be smaller than at high latitudes and,
correspondingly, there is less tropical temperature change across
interannual to thousand-year time scales. Another notable feature
is that the variability of temperature appears most similar globally at
those time scales furthest removed from the
annual and Milankovitch time periods, indicating that away from these
forcing periods climate relaxes to a more uniform background state.
Climate varies at all time scales, from months to millions of years and
longer. These changes are often studied independently of one
another, but now there is a clearer idea of how climate change is linked across time scales. “These
insights may help us to better understand past temperature changes,
improve our models of the climate, and maybe even predict future
climate change,” Huybers said.
Funding was provided by the NOAA Postdoctoral Program in Climate and Global Change and the National Science Foundation.
Originally published: May 18, 2006

