Improved Model-Data Agreement With Strongly Eddying Ocean Simulations in the Middle-Late Eocene

Publication date

2022-08

Authors

Nooteboom, PeterISNI 0000000492796068
Baatsen, MichielORCID 0000-0002-0123-7005ISNI 0000000492798776
Bijl, P.K.ORCID 0000-0002-1710-4012ISNI 0000000394379738
Kliphuis, Michael
van Sebille, E.ORCID 0000-0003-2041-0704ISNI 0000000388128000
Sluijs, A.ORCID 0000-0003-2382-0215ISNI 0000000389163131
Dijkstra, H.A.ISNI 0000000023267948
von der Heydt, A.S.ORCID 0000-0002-5557-3282ISNI 0000000395085782

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Abstract

Model simulations of past climates are increasingly found to compare well with proxy data at a global scale, but regional discrepancies remain. A persistent issue in modeling past greenhouse climates has been the temperature difference between equatorial and (sub-)polar regions, which is typically much larger in simulations than proxy data suggest. Particularly in the Eocene, multiple temperature proxies suggest extreme warmth in the southwest Pacific Ocean, where model simulations consistently suggest temperate conditions. Here, we present new global ocean model simulations at 0.1° horizontal resolution for the middle-late Eocene. The eddies in the high-resolution model affect poleward heat transport and local time-mean flow in critical regions compared to the noneddying flow in the standard low-resolution simulations. As a result, the high-resolution simulations produce higher surface temperatures near Antarctica and lower surface temperatures near the equator compared to the low-resolution simulations, leading to better correspondence with proxy reconstructions. Crucially, the high-resolution simulations are also much more consistent with biogeographic patterns in endemic-Antarctic and low-latitude-derived plankton, and thus resolve the long-standing discrepancy of warm subpolar ocean temperatures and isolating polar gyre circulation. The results imply that strongly eddying model simulations are required to reconcile discrepancies between regional proxy data and models, and demonstrate the importance of accurate regional paleobathymetry for proxy-model comparisons.

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Nooteboom, P, Baatsen, M, Bijl, P, Kliphuis, M, van Sebille, E, Sluijs, A, Dijkstra, H & von der Heydt, A 2022, 'Improved Model-Data Agreement With Strongly Eddying Ocean Simulations in the Middle-Late Eocene', Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, vol. 37, no. 8, e2021PA004405, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021PA004405