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Richard E. Moritz,1*Cecilia M. Bitz,1Eric J. Steig2
The pattern of recent surface warming observed in the Arctic
exhibits both polar amplification and a strong relation withtrends in
the Arctic Oscillation mode of atmospheric circulation.Paleoclimate
analyses indicate that Arctic surface temperatureswere higher during
the 20th century than during the precedingfew centuries and that polar
amplification is a common featureof the past. Paleoclimate evidence
for Holocene variations inthe Arctic Oscillation is mixed. Current
understanding of physicalmechanisms controlling atmospheric dynamics
suggests that anthropogenicinfluences could have forced the recent
trend in the Arctic Oscillation,but simulations with global climate
models do not agree. In mostsimulations, the trend in the Arctic
Oscillation is much weakerthan observed. In addition, the simulated
warming tends to belargest in autumn over the Arctic Ocean, whereas
observed warmingappears to be largest in winter and spring over the
continents.
1 Polar Science Center,
2 Quaternary Research Center, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA 98105-6698, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
dickm{at}apl.washington.edu
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