日本地球惑星科学連合2024年大会

講演情報

[J] ポスター発表

セッション記号 M (領域外・複数領域) » M-IS ジョイント

[M-IS12] 古気候・古海洋変動

2024年5月29日(水) 17:15 〜 18:45 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 6ホール)

コンビーナ:山崎 敦子(名古屋大学大学院環境学研究科)、岡崎 裕典(九州大学大学院理学研究院地球惑星科学部門)、長谷川 精(高知大学理工学部)、小長谷 貴志(東京大学大気海洋研究所)

17:15 〜 18:45

[MIS12-P33] Expanding PlioVAR to PlioMioVAR: Updates and Future Directions

*Sze Ling Ho1Heather L Ford2、Sindia Sosdian3、Erin McClymont4、Sevi Modestou5、Natalie Burls6、Aisling Dolan7 (1.Institute of Oceanography, National Taiwan University、2.Queen Mary University of London、3.Cardiff University、4.Durham University、5.Northumbria University、6.George Mason University、7.Leeds University)

キーワード:Pliocene, Miocene

The Pliocene (~2.6-5.3 million years ago), and increasingly the Miocene (~23-5.3 million years ago), are used by the climate community as pseudo-analogs of future climate change. Relative to today, the Plio-Miocene was globally warmer with reduced ice volume and reconstructed atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations similar to and/or higher than present-day. The Past Global Changes (PAGES) PlioMioVAR working group expands on the previous PAGES PlioVAR working group aims to create a synthesis of marine and terrestrial data to characterise spatial and temporal reconstructions of Plio-Miocene climate. Major outputs from PlioVAR include a synthesis and evaluation of multi-proxy sea surface temperatures (SSTs) during the KM5c interglacial (~3.2 million years ago) and Pliocene-Pleistocene intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation. In coordination with the Pliocene model intercomparison project Phase 3 (PlioMIP3), our Pliocene efforts are to 1) continuously update the existing mid-Pliocene database, 2) expanding our data synthesis to the early Pliocene (~4.5 and ~4.9 million years ago) and 3) synthesise terrestrial records. In coordination with the Miocene Model Intercomparison Project (MioMIP), our Miocene efforts are to 1) synthesise surface and deep temperatures and 2) identify Miocene time slices for data-model comparison. From workshop discussions, we have identified future research directions including 1) refining site-specific chronologies to ensure robust comparison of temperature records at short (i.e. glacial-interglacial) and longer time scales, 2) constraining seawater chemistry changes, 3) comparing multi-proxies with sufficient temporal and spatial coverage, and 4) reconstructing high-latitude regions (temperature and ice margin records) to improve our ability to to assess meridional temperature gradients, polar amplification, and ice sheet volume and stability. Focusing our efforts on these research directions could be community themes in the next incarnation of IODP. These databases and data-model comparisons are critical for navigating future climate change. This presentation outlines our current state of synthesis, assessment and analysis, and we welcome discussions on new data sets and approaches.