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    Higher frequency of Central Pacific El Nino events in recent decades relative to past centuries
    Freund, MB ; Henley, BJ ; Karoly, DJ ; McGregor, HV ; Abram, NJ ; Dommenget, D (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-06-01)
    El Niño events differ substantially in their spatial pattern and intensity. Canonical Eastern Pacific El Niño events have sea surface temperature anomalies that are strongest in the far eastern equatorial Pacific, whereas peak ocean warming occurs further west during Central Pacific El Niño events. The event types differ in their impacts on the location and intensity of temperature and precipitation anomalies globally. Evidence is emerging that Central Pacific El Niño events have become more common, a trend that is projected by some studies to continue with ongoing climate change. Here we identify spatial and temporal patterns in observed sea surface temperatures that distinguish the evolution of Eastern and Central Pacific El Niño events in the tropical Pacific. We show that these patterns are recorded by a network of 27 seasonally resolved coral records, which we then use to reconstruct Central and Eastern Pacific El Niño activity for the past four centuries. We find a simultaneous increase in Central Pacific events and a decrease in Eastern Pacific events since the late twentieth century that leads to a ratio of Central to Eastern Pacific events that is unusual in a multicentury context. Compared to the past four centuries, the most recent 30 year period includes fewer, but more intense, Eastern Pacific El Niño events.
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    Data Descriptor: A global multiproxy database for temperature reconstructions of the Common Era
    Emile-Geay, J ; McKay, NP ; Kaufman, DS ; von Gunten, L ; Wang, J ; Anchukaitis, KJ ; Abram, NJ ; Addison, JA ; Curran, MAJ ; Evans, MN ; Henley, BJ ; Hao, Z ; Martrat, B ; McGregor, HV ; Neukom, R ; Pederson, GT ; Stenni, B ; Thirumalai, K ; Werner, JP ; Xu, C ; Divine, DV ; Dixon, BC ; Gergis, J ; Mundo, IA ; Nakatsuka, T ; Phipps, SJ ; Routson, CC ; Steig, EJ ; Tierney, JE ; Tyler, JJ ; Allen, KJ ; Bertler, NAN ; Bjorklund, J ; Chase, BM ; Chen, M-T ; Cook, E ; de Jong, R ; DeLong, KL ; Dixon, DA ; Ekaykin, AA ; Ersek, V ; Filipsson, HL ; Francus, P ; Freund, MB ; Frezzotti, M ; Gaire, NP ; Gajewski, K ; Ge, Q ; Goosse, H ; Gornostaeva, A ; Grosjean, M ; Horiuchi, K ; Hormes, A ; Husum, K ; Isaksson, E ; Kandasamy, S ; Kawamura, K ; Kilbourne, KH ; Koc, N ; Leduc, G ; Linderholm, HW ; Lorrey, AM ; Mikhalenko, V ; Mortyn, PG ; Motoyama, H ; Moy, AD ; Mulvaney, R ; Munz, PM ; Nash, DJ ; Oerter, H ; Opel, T ; Orsi, AJ ; Ovchinnikov, DV ; Porter, TJ ; Roop, HA ; Saenger, C ; Sano, M ; Sauchyn, D ; Saunders, KM ; Seidenkrantz, M-S ; Severi, M ; Shao, X ; Sicre, M-A ; Sigl, M ; Sinclair, K ; St George, S ; St Jacques, J-M ; Thamban, M ; Thapa, UK ; Thomas, ER ; Turney, C ; Uemura, R ; Viau, AE ; Vladimirova, DO ; Wahl, ER ; White, JWC ; Yu, Z ; Zinke, J (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2017-07-11)
    Reproducible climate reconstructions of the Common Era (1 CE to present) are key to placing industrial-era warming into the context of natural climatic variability. Here we present a community-sourced database of temperature-sensitive proxy records from the PAGES2k initiative. The database gathers 692 records from 648 locations, including all continental regions and major ocean basins. The records are from trees, ice, sediment, corals, speleothems, documentary evidence, and other archives. They range in length from 50 to 2000 years, with a median of 547 years, while temporal resolution ranges from biweekly to centennial. Nearly half of the proxy time series are significantly correlated with HadCRUT4.2 surface temperature over the period 1850-2014. Global temperature composites show a remarkable degree of coherence between high- and low-resolution archives, with broadly similar patterns across archive types, terrestrial versus marine locations, and screening criteria. The database is suited to investigations of global and regional temperature variability over the Common Era, and is shared in the Linked Paleo Data (LiPD) format, including serializations in Matlab, R and Python.
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    Spatial and temporal agreement in climate model simulations of the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation
    Henley, BJ ; Meehl, G ; Power, SB ; Folland, CK ; King, AD ; Brown, JN ; Karoly, DJ ; Delage, F ; Gallant, AJE ; Freund, M ; Neukom, R (Institute of Physics (IoP), 2017-04-01)
    Accelerated warming and hiatus periods in the long-term rise of Global Mean Surface Temperature (GMST) have, in recent decades, been associated with the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO). Critically, decadal climate prediction relies on the skill of state-of-the-art climate models to reliably represent these low-frequency climate variations. We undertake a systematic evaluation of the simulation of the IPO in the suite of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 (CMIP5) models. We track the IPO in pre-industrial (control) and all-forcings (historical) experiments using the IPO tripole index (TPI). The TPI is explicitly aligned with the observed spatial pattern of the IPO, and circumvents assumptions about the nature of global warming. We find that many models underestimate the ratio of decadal-to-total variance in sea surface temperatures (SSTs). However, the basin-wide spatial pattern of positive and negative phases of the IPO are simulated reasonably well, with spatial pattern correlation coefficients between observations and models spanning the range 0.4–0.8. Deficiencies are mainly in the extratropical Pacific. Models that better capture the spatial pattern of the IPO also tend to more realistically simulate the ratio of decadal to total variance. Of the 13% of model centuries that have a fractional bias in the decadal-to-total TPI variance of 0.2 or less, 84% also have a spatial pattern correlation coefficient with the observed pattern exceeding 0.5. This result is highly consistent across both IPO positive and negative phases. This is evidence that the IPO is related to one or more inherent dynamical mechanisms of the climate system.
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    Multi-century cool- and warm-season rainfall reconstructions for Australia's major climatic regions
    Freund, M ; Henley, BJ ; Karoly, DJ ; Allen, KJ ; Baker, PJ (COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH, 2017-11-30)
    Abstract. Australian seasonal rainfall is strongly affected by large-scale ocean–atmosphere climate influences. In this study, we exploit the links between these precipitation influences, regional rainfall variations, and palaeoclimate proxies in the region to reconstruct Australian regional rainfall between four and eight centuries into the past. We use an extensive network of palaeoclimate records from the Southern Hemisphere to reconstruct cool (April–September) and warm (October–March) season rainfall in eight natural resource management (NRM) regions spanning the Australian continent. Our bi-seasonal rainfall reconstruction aligns well with independent early documentary sources and existing reconstructions. Critically, this reconstruction allows us, for the first time, to place recent observations at a bi-seasonal temporal resolution into a pre-instrumental context, across the entire continent of Australia. We find that recent 30- and 50-year trends towards wetter conditions in tropical northern Australia are highly unusual in the multi-century context of our reconstruction. Recent cool-season drying trends in parts of southern Australia are very unusual, although not unprecedented, across the multi-century context. We also use our reconstruction to investigate the spatial and temporal extent of historical drought events. Our reconstruction reveals that the spatial extent and duration of the Millennium Drought (1997–2009) appears either very much below average or unprecedented in southern Australia over at least the last 400 years. Our reconstruction identifies a number of severe droughts over the past several centuries that vary widely in their spatial footprint, highlighting the high degree of diversity in historical droughts across the Australian continent. We document distinct characteristics of major droughts in terms of their spatial extent, duration, intensity, and seasonality. Compared to the three largest droughts in the instrumental period (Federation Drought, 1895–1903; World War II Drought, 1939–1945; and the Millennium Drought, 1997–2005), we find that the historically documented Settlement Drought (1790–1793), Sturt's Drought (1809–1830) and the Goyder Line Drought (1861–1866) actually had more regionalised patterns and reduced spatial extents. This seasonal rainfall reconstruction provides a new opportunity to understand Australian rainfall variability by contextualising severe droughts and recent trends in Australia.