User Tools

Site Tools


pmip3:wg:p2k:meetings

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision Both sides next revision
pmip3:wg:p2k:meetings [2014/05/15 12:08]
jungclaus [Upcoming meetings]
pmip3:wg:p2k:meetings [2014/05/15 12:10]
jungclaus [WORKSHOP ON INTEGRATED ANALYSES OF RECONSTRUCTIONS AND MULTI-MODEL SIMULATIONS FOR THE PAST TWO MILLENNIA]
Line 6: Line 6:
 ==== WORKSHOP ON INTEGRATED ANALYSES OF RECONSTRUCTIONS AND MULTI-MODEL SIMULATIONS FOR THE PAST TWO MILLENNIA ==== ==== WORKSHOP ON INTEGRATED ANALYSES OF RECONSTRUCTIONS AND MULTI-MODEL SIMULATIONS FOR THE PAST TWO MILLENNIA ====
  
 +Comparing model simulations with proxy-based climate reconstructions offers the possibility of improving our understanding of the mechanisms contributing to climate variability and their links to external forcing or internal processes. It helps to identify deficiencies in the way climate variability is represented by proxy records or by model simulations,​ with implications foron  future climate change projections. The Past2K group of the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP3) is promoting model-data comparison activities focusing on the climate of the last millennium. The PAGES 2k Network is fostering similar activities covering the last 2000 years and has promoted the development of regional-scale data syntheses resulting in an ensemble of reconstructions for nearly all the continents (PAGES2k Consortium 2013). This meeting gathered members of both communities with a main focus on comparing the PMIP3 “past1000” simulations with the PAGES2k reconstructions.
  
-The workshop ​will be devoted ​to the analysis ​of reconstructions and multi-model simulations ​of the past two millennia and will blend the PAGES2K and the PMIP3 communitiesIt will  focus on the comparison ​between reconstructions (different regions ​of PAGES 2K as well as new or other existing evidences) and the new suite of past1000 simulations developed within PMIP3.+Activities started a few months before the actual ​workshop ​as most of the 32 workshop participants volunteered to contribute ​to the analyses ​of some diagnostics within one of the three working groups (WGs) focused on: 1) PAGES2K ​regions ​and PMIP3 simulations;​ 2) PMIP3 simulations and reconstructed circulation modes; 3) best practices and new approaches in model-data comparisonIn addition, participants were identified to prepare reviews. The three-day meeting was structured into review talks (days 1 and 2) and WG presentations (days 2 and 3), allowing time for ample discussion slots. The last day of the workshop focused on discussion and planning future joint activities, including 1) the preparation of manuscripts focused ​on the comparison of PMIP3 simulations and PAGES2k regional reconstructions,​ 2comparison between reconstructed ​and simulated modes of variability,​ and 3) on best practices in data-model comparison. Additionally,​ an outreach event was organized on communicating climate and climate change science.
  
 +Several issues from the discussions can be highlighted. For instance, significant correlations between regional temperature reconstructions and climate model simulations (Fig. 1) suggest that, at multidecadal scales and above, regional temperatures respond to external forcing (PAGES2k Consortium 2013; Sundberg et al. 2012; Schurer et al. 2014). The specific fingerprints of volcanic solar and anthropogenic contributions were analyzed from the perspective of various methodologies,​ with the role of solar forcing being acknowledged as comparatively smaller. The inter-regional correlations were shown to be lower in the reconstructions than within the models’ world, the latter evidencing a more homogeneous spatial temperature response. The implications of these differences for climate reconstructions and also for the assessment of confidence in climate models were discussed.
  
-The comparative analyses will give a particular emphasis to the continental/​regional scales, to the understanding ​of physical mechanisms, and to link past and future ​climate ​evolution ​to help constrain uncertainty ​in future climate projections. +The reconstructions of modes of atmosphere and ocean variability such as PDO, ENSO, IPO, PNA, NAO, SAM or the gyre system in the North Atlantic were presented. In most casesthey show very limited resemblance ​to their simulated counterparts. This suggests an overall lack of evidence for a direct external forcing imprint on the variability ​of many climate ​modes. Since internal variability seems to be the dominant factor, model simulations are useful for identifying the dynamics explaining some of the reconstructed changes. However, a more fundamental issue, with methodological implications for reconstructions,​ is the limited agreement found in various reconstructions of particular modesHowever, ​more fundamental issue is the low agreement in the available reconstructions of some of the modes that has methodological implications for the reconstructions of modes of variability. ​ S Such inconsistencies may reflect large spatial changes in the positions of the centers of action that are not captured with index definitions based on fixed locations or eigenvector approaches. Here, model-guided mode definition and proxy-site selection (e.g. Lehner et al. 2012) appears to emerge as a promising field of research 
- +
- +
-This will be product oriented workshop targeting on at least one consortium paper integrating ​the efforts and expertise ​of the various groups.+
  
  
pmip3/wg/p2k/meetings.txt · Last modified: 2014/06/23 12:07 by jungclaus