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A range of future climate scenarios are projected
for high atmospheric CO2 concentrations, given uncertainties
over future human actions as well as potential environmental
and climatic feedbacks. The geological record offers
an opportunity to understand climate system response to a
range of forcings and feedbacks which operate over multiple
temporal and spatial scales. Here, we examine a single interglacial
during the late Pliocene (KM5c, ca. 3:205 0:01 Ma)
when atmospheric CO2 exceeded pre-industrial concentrations,
but were similar to today and to the lowest emission
scenarios for this century. As orbital forcing and continental
configurations were almost identical to today, we are able
to focus on equilibrium climate system response to modern
and near-future CO2. Using proxy data from 32 sites,
we demonstrate that global mean sea-surface temperatures
were warmer than pre-industrial values, by 2:3 C for the
combined proxy data (foraminifera Mg=Ca and alkenones),
or by 3:2–3.4 C (alkenones only). Compared to the preindustrial
period, reduced meridional gradients and enhanced
warming in the North Atlantic are consistently reconstructed.
There is broad agreement between data and models at the
global scale, with regional differences reflecting ocean circulation
and/or proxy signals. An uneven distribution of proxy
data in time and space does, however, add uncertainty to our
anomaly calculations. The reconstructed global mean seasurface
temperature anomaly for KM5c is warmer than all
but three of the PlioMIP2 model outputs, and the reconstructed
North Atlantic data tend to align with the warmest
KM5c model values. Our results demonstrate that even under
low-CO2 emission scenarios, surface ocean warming may be
expected to exceed model projections and will be accentuated
in the higher latitudes.
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Copernicus Publications