From the University of Colorado at Boulder
Warming North Atlantic water tied to heating Arctic, according to new study

The temperatures of North Atlantic Ocean water flowing north into the Arctic Ocean adjacent to Greenland — the warmest water in at least 2,000 years — are likely related to the amplification of global warming in the Arctic, says a new international study involving the University of Colorado Boulder.
Led by Robert Spielhagen of the Academy of Sciences, Humanities and Literature in Mainz, Germany, the study showed that water from the Fram Strait that runs between Greenland and Svalbard — an archipelago constituting the northernmost part of Norway — has warmed roughly 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit in the past century. The Fram Strait water temperatures today are about 2.5 degrees F warmer than during the Medieval Warm Period, which heated the North Atlantic from roughly 900 to 1300 and affected the climate in Northern Europe and northern North America.
The team believes that the rapid warming of the Arctic and recent decrease in Arctic sea ice extent are tied to the enhanced heat transfer from the North Atlantic Ocean, said Spielhagen. According to CU-Boulder’s National Snow and Ice Data Center, the total loss of Arctic sea ice extent from 1979 to 2009 was an area larger than the state of Alaska, and some scientists there believe the Arctic will become ice-free during the summers within the next several decades.
“Such a warming of the Atlantic water in the Fram Strait is significantly different from all climate variations in the last 2,000 years,” said Spielhagen, also of the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in Keil, Germany.
According to study co-author Thomas Marchitto, a fellow at CU-Boulder’s Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, the new observations are crucial for putting the current warming trend of the North Atlantic in the proper context.
“We know that the Arctic is the most sensitive region on the Earth when it comes to warming, but there has been some question about how unusual the current Arctic warming is compared to the natural variability of the last thousand years,” said Marchitto, also an associate professor in CU-Boulder’s geological sciences department. “We found that modern Fram Strait water temperatures are well outside the natural bounds.”
A paper on the study will be published in the Jan. 28 issue of Science. The study was supported by the German Research Foundation; the Academy of Sciences, Humanities and Literature in Mainz, Germany; and the Norwegian Research Council.
Other study co-authors included Kirstin Werner and Evguenia Kandiano of the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, Steffen Sorensen, Katarzyna Zamelczyk, Katrine Husum and Morten Hald from the University of Tromso in Norway and Gereon Budeus of the Alfred Wegener Institute of Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven, Germany.
Since continuous meteorological and oceanographic data for the Fram Strait reach back only 150 years, the team drilled ocean sediment cores dating back 2,000 years to determine past water temperatures. The researchers used microscopic, shelled protozoan organisms called foraminifera — which prefer specific water temperatures at depths of roughly 150 to 650 feet — as tiny thermometers.
In addition, the team used a second, independent method that involved analyzing the chemical composition of the foraminifera shells to reconstruct past water temperatures in the Fram Strait, said Marchitto.
The Fram Strait branch of the North Atlantic Current is the major carrier of oceanic heat to the Arctic Ocean. In the eastern part of the strait, relatively warm and salty water enters the Arctic. Fed by the Gulf Stream Current, the North Atlantic Current provides ice-free conditions adjacent to Svalbard even in winter, said Marchitto.
“Cold seawater is critical for the formation of sea ice, which helps to cool the planet by reflecting sunlight back to space,” said Marchitto. “Sea ice also allows Arctic air temperatures to be very cold by forming an insulating blanket over the ocean. Warmer waters could lead to major sea ice loss and drastic changes for the Arctic.”
The rate of Arctic sea ice decline appears to be accelerating due to positive feedbacks between the ice, the Arctic Ocean and the atmosphere, Marchitto said. As Arctic temperatures rise, summer ice cover declines, more solar heat is absorbed by the ocean and additional ice melts. Warmer water may delay freezing in the fall, leading to thinner ice cover in winter and spring, making the sea ice more vulnerable to melting during the next summer.
Air temperatures in Greenland have risen roughly 7 degrees F in the past several decades, thought to be due primarily to an increase in Earth’s greenhouse gases, according to CU-Boulder scientists.
“We must assume that the accelerated decrease of the Arctic sea ice cover and the warming of the ocean and atmosphere of the Arctic measured in recent decades are in part related to an increased heat transfer from the Atlantic,” said Spielhagen.
###
===============================================================
This statement prompts some things I’d point out that temper it:
“Air temperatures in Greenland have risen roughly 7 degrees F in the past several decades”.
In those remote locations like Nuuk, Greenland, what have we there? Remote pockets of humanity. Humanity building little cities of warmth in the cold Arctic, growing cities:
With 15,469 inhabitants as of 2010, Nuuk is the fastest-growing town in Greenland, with migrants from the smaller towns and settlements reinforcing the trend. Together with Tasiilaq, it is the only town in the Sermersooq municipality exhibiting stable growth patterns over the last two decades. The population increased by over a quarter relative to the 1990 levels, and by nearly 16 percent relative to the 2000 levels.
Nuuk population growth dynamics in the last two decades. Source: Statistics Greenland
Nuuk is not only a growing city, where UHI might now be a factor (but don’t take my word for it, see what NASA had to say about it at AGU this year), it is also a place where the official GHCN thermometers used by NASA are right next to human influences…like turboprop jet exhaust, such as this one in Nuuk’s airport right on the tarmac:
Hmmm, I wonder what happened in Nuuk? The plot below is from NASA GISS (see it yourself here). That “instant global warming” line seems out of character for natural variation in Nuuk. Note the data discontinuity. Often that suggests a station move and/or a change in station environment.
Sometimes a line like that with indicates airport construction near the thermometer, something I documented here.
And here’s the interesting thing. Nuuk is just one data point, one “raging red” anomaly in the sparsely spaced hands-on-human-measured NASA GISS surface temperature dataset for the Arctic. The patterns of warm pockets of humanity with airports and GHCN stations repeat themselves all over the Arctic, because as anyone who has visited the Arctic knows, aviation is the lifeline of these remote communities. And where do they measure the weather data? At the airport of course. Aviation doesn’t work otherwise.
See my complete report on the weird temperatures from Nuuk here. And while you are at it, read my report about the weird temperatures from Svalbaard, another warm single data point from NASA GISS. Interestingly, at that station a local citizen did some science and proved the UHI effect at the airport.
Yes these are just two examples. But there is no denying these facts:
- Remote communities in the Arctic are islands of anthropogenic warmth
- These communities rely of aviation as a lifeline
- The weather is measured at these airports, it is required for safety
- Airports release huge amounts of waste heat, from exhaust, de-icing, terminal buildings, and even tarmac in the sun.
- The majority of GHCN weather stations (used by NASA GISS) in the Arctic are at airports.
Remember Nuuk and Svalbarrd’s thermometers, and then ask Jim Hansen why NASA GISS, a “space studies agency”, doesn’t use satellite data but instead relies upon a surface record that another division of NASA says likely has significant UHI effects that NASA GISS doesn’t filter out sensibly (they only allow for 0.05°C downward adjustment).
And finally, can you really trust data from an organization that takes incoming data for that station and shifts it more than an entire degree C in the past, making a new trend? See the difference between “raw” (which really isn’t raw, it has a scads of adjustments already from NOAA) compared to the GISS final output in this chart:
The data is downloaded from GISS for the station, datasets 1 and 2 were used (raw-combined for this location and homogenized) which are available from the station selector via a link to data below the charts they make on the GISS website. The data is plotted up to the data continuity break, and again after. The trend lines are plotted to the data continuity break, and there’s no trend in the raw data for the last 100+ years.
The curious thing is that there’s no trend in the raw data at Nuuk until you do either (or both) of two things:
1. You use GISS homogenized data to plot the trend
2. You use the data after the discontinuity to plot the trend
I believe the data discontinuity represents a station move, one that exposed it to a warmer local environment. And clearly, by examining the GISS data for Nuuk, you can see that GISS adds adjustments that are not part of the measured reality. What justification could there possibly be to adjust the temperatures of the past downwards? What justification in a growing community (as shown by the population curve) could there be for doing an adjustment that is reverse of waste energy UHI?
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.






Really, it seems a mixture of two different stories here. The story about the Greenland air temperature warming is a completely different topic than the long term study of the warming of the water flowing into the Arctic. The warming of the N. Atlantic water is far more significant IMO, as it takes a lot more energy to have warmed that water, and could, in some portion, account for some small portion of Trenberth’s “missing heat”.
Not unrelated, the Global Sea Ice Area, looking at both the Arctic and Antarctic, is right now near its modern satellite record low, with negative anomalies on both poles, which of course means there is a record amount of open water being struck and warmed by sunlight that once was being reflected by sea ice. This is not insignificant as a lot more w/m2 is being absorbed by the oceans, exactly as predicted by GCM’s when looking at the effects of polar amplification of AGW.
You can wave your arms at the paleoclimatological reconstruction but what about the instrumental measurements over the last 150 years. The difference between informed skepticism and knee-jerk denialism is evident in some of the comments above.
Nuuk Airport was build 1979 ….. about 4 km Northeast of Nuuk
Kr
Santa
The gulf stream heads up there doesn’t it. And why do they let those ice breakers go in there and bust up the sea ice, so it melts faster ?
Well at least the used real dead proxy data, instead of simulated dead proxy data. Those minifloras don’t migrate like the caribou do they ?
“”””” S.E.Hendriksen says:
January 27, 2011 at 1:49 pm
Nuuk Airport was build 1979 ….. about 4 km Northeast of Nuuk
Kr
Santa “””””
Good to see you out of hibernation Svend. You’ve been sending the folks back east some mighty norty weather lately; even some just today.
Sooner or later they’re coming to get you.
George
Paul (12:39 PM) asks:
“The article above doesn’t mention Nuuk specifically, but rather the examination of ocean sediment cores “to determine past water temperatures.” How accurate are ocean sediment cores for this purpose?”
I think they are probably pretty accurate if done correctly. Using them, Llloyd Keigwin, in a 1996 article in Science, showed that sea surface temperatures in the Sargasso Sea during the Little Ice Age were about 1 degree colder than the current temps of the time at the site. The study also showed that sea temps in the Sargasso Sea were about 1 degree warmer during the Medieval Warm Period than the current temps at the time at the site.
Another study using ocean sediment cores examined sea surface temperatures during the mid Pliocene, about 2.5 million years ago. That very interesting study is:
“Mid-Pliocene sea level and continental ice volume based on coupled benthic Mg/Ca
palaeotemperatures and oxygen isotopes” Dwyer GS and Chandler MA Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A (2009) 367, 157–168
Fridtjof Nansen in his ‘Farthest North’, a record of Arctic exploration from 1893 – 1896, notes the complexity of sea temperatures when trying to infer the effects of Atlantic water.
Admittedly his methods were of his time and might be seen as crude today, though they were not that far removed from the ‘bucket’ method of estimating SSTs.
He found that temps fell from the surface down to 80m, rose from there to 280m, fell from 300m, rose at 326m then fell to 445m where it began to rise, then fell steadily to 3000m, to rise slowly thereafter. (pp 263-264)
Pretty complex therefore. Hope the foraminifera are up to reflecting this complexity.
Obviously “anthropogenic” warming – just a different kind.
@RGates
How much extra sunlight is being striking open water in the arctic now?
With all these records being claimed to be broken it will be fascinating next week to see whether the UAH globally averaged satellite based temperature for the lower atmosphere turns around to join them OR continues to fall like a bomb towards ground zero:
http://www.drroyspencer.com/wp-content/uploads/UAH_LT_1979_thru_Dec_102.gif
I love these sediment studies. The depositation can’t be linear, how do they determine the age of the sediments? Carbon dating? How many points?
If they just assume a constant rate of sedimentation wouldn’t the diameter of the ocean floor be increasing by hundreds of feet per millenium? Yes mud flows downhill but it doesn’t deposit evenly along the oceans. How do you know if 10,000 years of sediment didn’t wash into the tropics or vice versa?
Maybe the answer is real simple. I’ll wait.
No one mentions the North Atlantic Conveyor?
Watt’s up with that?
The closing paragraph of the press release talks of an accelerated decrease of Arctic ice cover. For an accelerating decrease, then each year there must be a bigger decrease than the year before. How can anyone, let alone a supposed scientist, possibly make such a ridiculous claim?
Also the precision of the temperature claims leaves a lot to be desired – sea surface temperatures or at what depth, annual average, peak, winter,summer or what?
And as the the use of foraminifera, I am astounded that any warmist admits to using these as, according to Wikipedia, they are clearly in the pay of big oil – ” The oil industry relies heavily on microfossils such as forams to find potential oil deposits.”
How much is the increase in solar radiation being absorbed in the arctic now? At what angle does open water absorb more than it reflects?
I read somewhere that the arctic ice melting is cooling the ocean and when that water returns to the south it is cooler water than before causing a global cooling of atmosphere temperatures and then the ocean does not heat up as much and when it circulates back north the cooler water lets the ice start forming again and the cycles start over. Hmmm.. I’m not so sure about that.
R Gates, it is winter in the NH right now. Any sunlight reaching water which may have been ice-covered in previous years would struggle to warm a lizard on a black rock.
jurav v above killed this work right here
That graph of population is very misleading. Start at zero and it looks far less of a ‘Hockey Stick’.
Let’s not get into the same marketing lies that the alarmists use, please!
commieBob says:
January 27, 2011 at 12:59 pm
And there is also the greater probability that the light will be reflected at that angle.
And the fact that most of the time the sun is there, there is more ice than water in any case, due to the ‘lag’ that causes the minimum to be in September, not July when it is hottest. When the freezing happens, there is little or no sun at all anyway!
None of the Arctic ice ‘positive feedback’ theories have been tested and proved AFAIK. They are made up, and then accepted, and then repeated as if absolute incontrovertible truth. This is a regular pattern in Post Normal Climate ‘Science’
Ken Lydell
Many here will have knee-jerk reactions to your using the term “denialism”. You have not earned the right to call anyone here a denier. You have to prove your point with evidence and courtesy. But courtesy disapproves the use of this hate word here. And we are not deniers. Sometimes we chuckle. But don’t measure our knowledge from that.
Now check here and here. All the evidence is that Greenland was warmer in the Middle Ages, and was at least as warm in the 1930’s. Yes, records.
If it is this bad, why did the leader of the “free CO2/man made global warming”, Pres. Obama cut NASA’s budget, seems if the planet is going to overheat and die these guys would want a way off this place asap.
Might be that all that cold water welling up due to the La Nina is crowding the warm water into the Arctic.
There is a lot less of that warm water that croweded into the Arctic via Greenland, now that Winter has taken it’s toll on it.
the sediments may be good at comparing various periods in the past to each other, giving relative warmth and coldness signals. But to make the claim that todays SST is the highest in 2000 years, then they should show that the PROXY, the sediments, show this directly. If instead they translate sediment data into temp data using some overlap period, then use today’s TEMPS to claim this unprecedented warmth, it is not valid. Show us the data.
Nothing to see here. It can all be explained by natural variability.
Compare the Nuuk temperature record with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amo_timeseries_1856-present.svg
Notice how temperatures in Nuuk warmed between 1925-60 and again from 1990-present, right in phase with the warm periods of the AMO.
Anybody seriously think this is co-incidence?
As for the Arctic Sea Ice, it has been taking a “triple hit” from the warm AMO (since 1990), the warm PDO (1975 onwards) and a high level of solar activity (since 1950).
Little wonder it has declined.
It looks as though two of these factors (the PDO and solar activity) are changing into a cooling mode, with the AMO is predicted to do so around 2020. If Arctic Sea Ice continues to decline through all that, then those predicting the “death spiral” may be onto something, but to say that it is occurring already is premature.
Let’s wait and see………..
Ray Boorman says:
January 27, 2011 at 2:20 pm
R Gates, it is winter in the NH right now. Any sunlight reaching water which may have been ice-covered in previous years would struggle to warm a lizard on a black rock.
_____
Indeed, there is far less insolation in winter than in summer, but that is not the point. The point is that we are seeing near a record low GLOBAL sea ice at the present moment, meaning that, on a global level, between both the SH and NH, a record amount (for this time of year) of sunlight is hitting water that in previous years would have been sea ice.
Also interesting is that the time frame covered for the study of the N. Atlantic water, (2000 years) would have crossed both the MWP, the “Little Ice Age”, back to the Roman Warm Period. Now, this current warming certainly could be something related to the beginning of a new so-called Bond Event (Bond Event 0), as the timing would be about right. Never the less, as the study notes, it is certainly an abnormality based on what the temperature has been the past 2000 years, and the declining Global Sea Ice area is in line with general warming the oceans.