Publications by authors named "A VON DER HEYDT"

Article Synopsis
  • The Earth is warming due to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, which may lead to critical climate changes like the weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC).
  • Researchers used the Community Earth System Model (CESM2) to analyze how AMOC weakening affects atmospheric carbon dioxide (pCO2) under different emission scenarios from 2015 to 2100.
  • They found a slight increase in pCO2 in response to AMOC weakening, with local climate and carbon cycle changes that could significantly impact ecosystems and society, despite overall global effects being small.
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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding the link between temperature and carbon dioxide levels is crucial for predicting future climate changes.
  • This study examines carbon dioxide concentrations over the last 15 million years using fossilized compounds found in sediment from a specific site off the California coast.
  • The findings show a decline in carbon dioxide levels from 650 to 280 parts per million (ppm) over this time, leading to higher average sensitivity estimates for temperature changes compared to current global warming predictions by the IPCC.
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Since the industrial revolution, oceans have become substantially noisier. The noise increase is mainly caused by increased shipping, resource exploration, and infrastructure development affecting marine life at multiple levels, including behavior and physiology. Together with increasing anthropogenic noise, climate change is altering the thermal structure of the oceans, which in turn might affect noise propagation.

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Accurate understanding of permafrost dynamics is critical for evaluating and mitigating impacts that may arise as permafrost degrades in the future; however, existing projections have large uncertainties. Studies of how permafrost responded historically during Earth's past warm periods are helpful in exploring potential future permafrost behavior and to evaluate the uncertainty of future permafrost change projections. Here, we combine a surface frost index model with outputs from the second phase of the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project to simulate the near-surface (~3 to 4 m depth) permafrost state in the Northern Hemisphere during the mid-Pliocene warm period (mPWP, ~3.

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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.

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