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Extremes become routine in an emerging new Arctic

Summary/Abstract

The Arctic is rapidly warming and experiencing tremendous changes in sea ice, ocean and terrestrial regions. Lack of long-term scientific observations makes it difficult to assess whether Arctic changes statistically represent a ‘new Arctic’ climate. Here we use five Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 class Earth system model large ensembles to show how the Arctic is transitioning from a dominantly frozen state and to quantify the nature and timing of an emerging new Arctic climate in sea ice, air temperatures and precipitation phase (rain versus snow). Our results suggest that Arctic climate has already emerged in sea ice. Air temperatures will emerge under the representative concentration pathway 8.5 scenario in the early- to mid-twenty-first century, followed by precipitation-phase changes. Despite differences in mean state and forced response, these models show striking similarities in their anthropogenically forced emergence from internal variability in Arctic sea ice, surface temperatures and precipitation-phase changes.

Landrum, L., Holland, M.M. Extremes become routine in an emerging new Arctic. Nat. Clim. Chang. 10, 1108–1115 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0892-z

View Resource
September 2020
Laura Landrum, Marika M. Holland
Nature
Peer-reviewed Study
Arctic
Climate Change Attribution → Cryosphere

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