The North Atlantic heat is on

From the University of Colorado at Boulder

Warming North Atlantic water tied to heating Arctic, according to new study

Photo of the German research vessel Maria S. Merian moving through sea ice in Fram Strait northwest of Svalbard. The research team discovered the water there was the warmest in at least 2,000 years, which has implications for a warming and melting Arctic. Credit: Nicolas van Nieuwenhove (IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel)

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 dynamics

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:

Nuuk Airport looking Southwest Image: Panaramio via Google Earth 

Nuuk Airport, Stevenson Screen. Image from Webshots – click to enlarge 

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?

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Mark Wagner
January 27, 2011 7:12 pm

The point is that sea ice represents a part of the total albedo of the earth, and as such, when the Global Sea ice is at or near a record minimum, the extra sunlight that is not being reflected is being asborbed into the ocean.
There you go again. There IS no “extra sunlight not being reflected” at that latitude. Even in polar summer, the sun is low to the horizon and weak, and what little sunlight there is reflects off the water at low angles. (Ever see how much light is reflected off the ocean at sundown? That’s the MAX angle you get even in polar summer.) Meanwhile, the now un-insulated water makes a fine radiator of ocean heat to space. Especially during dark (or “evening”) hours and polar winter.
The poles aren’t a cold sink. They’re a radiator.

eadler
January 27, 2011 7:27 pm

The U of Colorado scientists are reporting on Ocean temperatures in Fram strait being at historically record levels. The theory that Greenland air temperatures are a result of the Urban Heat Island effect at Nuuk has no bearing on this finding which is the main point of the paper.
It is well known that the ocean temperatures affect the climate of the adjacent coastline. That is what the scientists were referring to when they said that the ocean temperature played a role in the air temperatures of Greenland.
Regarding the jump in temperature that you pointed to at Nuuk, this is reproduced in a small town in Greenland far away from Nuuk, which lends credence to the belief that this temperature jump is a real effect. I pointed this out in a post on a previous thread that you devoted to Greenland temperatures and the UHI effect.
There are other stations in Greenland that could be compared with Nuuk to determine whether the data is anomalous or not. That is the method used by Climatologists who study this type of thing to sort things out. Those types of studies are what resulted in the corrections to the raw data in the first place.
Egedesminde, population about 3,000, which is the closest, that has data from 1950 to 2010 has a similar jump in temperature to Nuuk for the last year shown on the graph.
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/gistemp_station.py?id=431042200000&data_set=1&num_neighbors=1
And so does Prins Christi:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/gistemp_station.py?id=431043900003&data_set=1&num_neighbors=1
There is no evidence that economic growth has swollen the population of these two little towns or created an UHI .

LazyTeenager
January 27, 2011 7:31 pm

Aaron Stonebeat reckons
—–
I have always thought the sun did not shine too much in the arctic during winter, at least not above about 70 degrees. And where it does the light comes in at a very low angle, so it would even be reflected by unfrozen water.
?
I’m a layman. I must be wrong.
—–
Actually I would like to see this assertion checked. It’s OK for flat water but I am not sure that it is correct for choppy water.

AusieDan
January 27, 2011 7:32 pm

“Global warming in the arctic” ???????
Don’t they mean “local warming in the arctic”?
Or does the arctic cover the globe
Or perhaps just teleports its commands to the whole globe?
Or what do they mean by that?

AusieDan
January 27, 2011 7:39 pm

But Anthony –
“scientists” have told us that the arctic is warming alarmingly!
Why are you not alarmed?
Just please do not tell us what you are alarmed about.
(that could spoil the fun).

Fitzy
January 27, 2011 8:32 pm

Foraminifera?
Back in my day we used a proxy critter called a Bleak-Fish, Bleak-fish prefer the stable temperatures found in the Policy Waters of the Green Ocean.
We have records stretching back one Hundred million years, or last Tuesday, depending on whose asking, longer still if theres a FOIA request.
Bleak fish respond rapidly to changing Policy Temperature, they grow large and plentiful when the temps go up, and tend to die off when the temps go down.
By drilling deep into he stygian mud at the utter most depths in the Green Ocean, AKA the Misery Sea, we can extract sedimentary cores that contain the fossil record of past Policy Epochs.
In our research, we found that Blooms of the Payola bacteria, led to the rapid growth of the Bleak-Fish, who thrived in the dense mist of easy nutrition. By Nitrogen, Oxygen, Sodium and Einsteinium dating, we found that the Bleak-Fish currently out number the former, entire total population of Bleak-Fish within the Historical record of life on Earth.
This Boom always precedes a die off, which will be a world record for sure. Sadly we can’t account how many Bleak-Fish will perish, and it’s a [You Know What Goes Here] that we can’t.

eadler
January 27, 2011 8:42 pm

Mark Wagner says:
January 27, 2011 at 7:12 pm
“The point is that sea ice represents a part of the total albedo of the earth, and as such, when the Global Sea ice is at or near a record minimum, the extra sunlight that is not being reflected is being asborbed into the ocean.
There you go again. There IS no “extra sunlight not being reflected” at that latitude. Even in polar summer, the sun is low to the horizon and weak, and what little sunlight there is reflects off the water at low angles. (Ever see how much light is reflected off the ocean at sundown? That’s the MAX angle you get even in polar summer.) Meanwhile, the now un-insulated water makes a fine radiator of ocean heat to space. Especially during dark (or “evening”) hours and polar winter.
The poles aren’t a cold sink. They’re a radiator.”
Sorry but you are wrong about the reflectivity of water versus angle. The reflectivity increases to 50% at a glancing angle of 5 degrees. The tilt angle of the earth is 23 degrees, so during the summer time even open water at the pole
will absorb. On top of this, the ocean is not totally flat. At small angles of incident light, waviness results in reduced reflectivity because of the steepness of the reflectivity-vs.-incident-angle curve and a locally increased average incident angle. Therefore absorption will be larger in wavy water than in flat still water.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albedo
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Water_reflectivity.jpg

John
January 27, 2011 8:52 pm

To Conradg (5:35) — what a great link! I had no idea that Science Magazine has now abandoned the principle that statistical significance of results is important, not just whether the result is significant (it isn’t), but whether the issue of significance should even be discussed! Wow, have the mighty fallen.
For those who didn’t see it, here is the link again:
http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2010/08/climate-alarmism-at-science-magazine.html

phlogiston
January 27, 2011 8:56 pm

@Scott Ramsdell
Your point about deep ocean currents at the tropics and their connection to the gulf stream and thence the Arctic, is important.
In these AGW leaning studies the interpretation focuses mypoically on albedo. However, the gulf stream and (possibly) its periodic oscillation in strength can also influence Arctic ice.
There is another story apart from albedo. Periodic retreat of Arctic ice leaves more open water to be cooled, and this could give an uptick in cold downwellling – such as is known to be happening since 2007.
Periodic arctic ice retreat could be a trigger for increased downwelling that could entrain global oceanic oscillations. Note that increased vertical ocean mixing always means downward movement of heat and cooling of the upper ocean.

EdH
January 27, 2011 9:10 pm

A nice close up picture of the Nuut airport Stevenson screen:
http://emilhannes.blog.is/blog/emilhannes/image/1022190/
Seems to be a blog, in Danish.
Interestingly there wasn’t a land airport until 1979, which suggests a fairly drastic relocation of the screen at that time, unless the airport was built on the site of the heliport. Before the choppers it was sea planes, and before planes ships, no doubt.

Tim Spence
January 27, 2011 10:02 pm

Jeff said …..
we do not have any good raw global temperature data for the last 100 years with which to make any scientific judgements with … none …. zero … zip … nada …
Yes Jeff, you are quite correct, although I said it a few weeks back!
It’s fundamental, and needs to be repeated. Insufficient data.

Colin W
January 27, 2011 10:35 pm

Just read this article and thought I would have a look in Google Earth to see if I could locate the Nuuk airport. There is a lovely shot of a plane right in front of the Stevenson screen with the engine exhaust directed straight at it.
Who would’a thought.

LDLAS
January 27, 2011 10:50 pm

Temperatures in Greenland:
http://www.dmi.dk/dmi/index/klima/klimaet_indtil_nu/temperaturen_i_groenland.htm
“The warmest year in the extended Greenland temperature
record is 1941, while the 1930s and 1940s are the
warmest decades.” (Extending Greenland temperature records into the
late eighteenth century B. M. Vinther,1 K. K. Andersen,1 P. D. Jones,2 K. R. Briffa,2 and J. Cappelen3 JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 111, D11105, doi:10.1029/2005JD006810, 2006)

Peter Wilson
January 27, 2011 11:24 pm

Conradg (5:35)
Thanks for an interesting link, which details a paper in Science last year claiming that Net Primary Production (plant growth, basically) had fallen during the 2000’s. Trouble is, the key results are very noisy and nowhere near statistically significant, but were published anyway, without qualification, because the authors, and Science, felt it was important for “policy makers” to be warned (alarmed?)
Well worth a look – here it is again to save you looking back up the page
http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2010/08/climate-alarmism-at-science-magazine.html

Jimbo
January 27, 2011 11:43 pm

Greenland air temps of the past:

“…the rate of warming in 1920–1930 was about 50% higher than that in 1995–2005.”
Petr Chylek et. al.
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2006/2006GL026510.shtml

“The annual whole ice sheet 1919–32 warming trend is 33% greater in magnitude than the 1994–2007 warming.”
Jason E. Box et. al.
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/2009JCLI2816.1

“We found that northern hemisphere temperature and Greenland temperature changed synchronously at periods of ~20 years and 40–100 years. This quasi-periodic multi-decadal temperature fluctuation persisted throughout the last millennium, and is likely to continue into the future.”
Takuro Kobashi et. al.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/n567324n1n3321h3/

“The warmest year in the extended Greenland temperature record is 1941, while the 1930s and 1940s are the warmest decades.”
B. M. Vinther et. al.
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/greenland/vintheretal2006.pdf
[pdf]

1937
“Particulars are given regarding the big rise of winter temperatures in Greenland and its more oceanic climate during the last fifteen years.”
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/qj.49706327108/abstract

tty
January 28, 2011 12:01 am

Fed by the Gulf Stream Current, the North Atlantic Current provides ice-free conditions adjacent to Svalbard even in winter, said Marchitto.

Not this winter!
http://retro.met.no/images/image_000140_1296140716.jpg

Robbo
January 28, 2011 2:12 am

Ken Lydell
…. Given the woefully inadequate state of climate science I suspect that there may no satisfactory explanation of the phenomenon at present. Ocean circulation systems are poorly understood and the more we know about them the less we understand…..
Exactly. BTW, did you read the recent “is the enso a nonlinear oscillator” post here. ISTM the chaos theory framework is the way to reach understanding of climate in general and ocean circulations specifically. Th bad news is that a good understanding may well lead to the conclusion that climate change is intrinsically unpredictable, just like the weather.

Peter Plail
January 28, 2011 2:37 am

eadler says:
January 27, 2011 at 8:42 pm
But if the water is choppy only part of the total area of open sea is absorbing. For every ripple or wave there is a reverse side which is absorbing less sunlight.
Add to that the fact that choppy water is usually caused by wind, which will probably add cooling due to evaporation.
Add to that the possibility that not every day in the Arctic is sunny and I would guess that windy days are more likely to be associated with cloud cover.
This calculation is far more complex than consideration of just albedo and incident light angles.
And to add another factor. 15% ice cover, which is the common measure of ice extent, is affected strongly by prevailing winds and tides. A quick peep at our host’s sea ice pages shows Ric Werme’s side-by-side comparison of ice concentrations for Jan 2007 and Jan 2011 (about halfway down the page). My unscientific eyes can determine that this year’s ice is considerably more concentrated than 4 years ago, suggesting that the low extent this year does not mean less ice just tighter packing. And don’t forget that 2007 was a record low, so I would say the the ice this years is looking a lot less vulnerable than previous years (I was going to say looks a lot more healthy, but I’m not sure that the impending cold swing is exactly good news).

Mycroft
January 28, 2011 4:00 am

Whats the betting Trenberth try’s to jump on this study for his “missing heat”!

Jessie
January 28, 2011 4:09 am

Roy Weiler says: January 27, 2011 at 4:28 pm
The lurker
Try Jennifer Marohasy http://www.jennifermarohasy.com/ (blog button)
Marie Curie is always a good start for a solid scientific approach. The BBC or ABC did a documentary some 30 years ago on her life work. Also Elizabeth I is impressive.
Books by Bob Carter and Ian Plimer are good stuff for girls (and women). And the Secret Seven (Enid Blyton) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Seven
are always good for very young people. !
Willis E http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/01/28/the-cold-equations/
has a tale. [Scientific] fables have since moved on to endocrine and hormonal evidence (HPA axis) and mania/greed (psychology DSM) in politics and academia. Though Willis has a boating background (also tropics) so females and bananas are likely deemed ‘purveyors of ill luck’ in his book. Though rightly so, she shouldn’t have ‘snuck’ on and upset the landing weight with a bag of anti-plague. But they launched with the weight so not clear that the landing weight, less fuel consumed and there were no stopovers would have made that great a difference. But these days they have prescription via the global net and instructions.
And the Science Academies (Royal Societies) should have reasonable information for your friend’s daughter to pursue.
Fitzy says: January 27, 2011 at 8:32 pm
Very witty. Neat.
And excellent observation.

Graham
January 28, 2011 4:20 am

Ray Boorman January 27, 2011 at 1:06 pm says:
“Surely a large proportion of the sunlight striking the ocean at 30 deg would be reflected back to the sky.”
That corresponds to an angle of incidence of 60 deg. According to my old Optics textbook by MH Freeman 10th Edn, application of Fresnel’s equations gives a reflectance of about 10%, assuming a refractive index of 1.33 for water and 1.00 for air.

Jessie
January 28, 2011 4:41 am

Fitzy says:
January 27, 2011 at 8:32 pm
What did the bleak fish reconcile to mate with?

Colin Bretherton
January 28, 2011 4:48 am

I was just looking on cryosphere today and it looks as if the usually ice-free west coast of spitzbergen is icing up this winter. Has anyone else noticed this?

Louise
January 28, 2011 5:03 am

Nash – naming Greenland as ‘green’ was political spin to encourage migration, not an indication that it was indeed a green and pleasant land. Also, I live in the Midlands in the UK and grow grapes in my garden – no problem.
When you say “… can anyone explain common sense is wrong?” – the answer is because you’ve got your facts wrong.

ozspeaksup
January 28, 2011 5:24 am

rbateman says:
January 27, 2011 at 1:17 pm
The wild snow & cold from the Plains to the East Coast of the US must be due to Global Cooling.
I’m going to name my next dog Hansen.
—————
aw thats animal cruelty! no dog deserves that abuse:-)