<p>The ocean plays a central role in determining the climate of the earth. The oceanic circulation largely controls the temporal evolution of cliΒ mate changes resulting from human activities such as the increase of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and also affects the magnitude and regional dist
Climate-Ocean Interaction
β Scribed by S. J. Foreman (auth.), M. E. Schlesinger (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 378
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Preface This book is the culmination of a workshop jointly organized by NATO and CEC on Climate-Ocean Interaction which was held at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University during 26-30 September 1988. The objective of the ARW was to assess the current status of research on climate-ocean interaction, with a major focus on the development of coupled atmosphere-ocean-ice models and their application in the study of past, present and possible future climates. This book contains 16 chapters divided into four parts: Introduction; Observations of the Climate of the Ocean; Modelling the Atmospheric, Oceanic and Sea Ice Components of the Climatic System; and Simulating the Variability of Climate on Short, Medium and Long Time Scales. A fifth part contains the reports of the five Working Groups on: Climate Observations, Modelling, ENSO Modelling and Prediction, Climate-Ocean Interaction on TIme Scales of Decades to Centuries, and Impact of Paleoclimatic Proxy Data on Climate Modelling. Preface ix Acknowledgements I thank Howard Cattle and Neil Wells for their guidance and assistance as members of the Workshop Organizing Committee. I particularly thank Michael Davey for all his efforts as Local Organizer to make the ARW a success. I also thank the staff of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University, for their help with the arrangements for the ARW.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xvi
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
The Ocean as a Component of the Climate System....Pages 3-17
Front Matter....Pages 19-19
Observed Variations of Sea Surface Temperature....Pages 21-52
Can Box Ocean Models Calibrated by Inverse Methods Provide a Means of Testing Ocean Circulation Models?....Pages 53-64
Front Matter....Pages 65-65
General Circulation Modelling of the Atmosphere....Pages 67-86
An Ocean Modelling System for Supercomputer Architectures of the 1990s....Pages 87-95
Modelling Sea Ice for Climate Studies....Pages 97-123
Front Matter....Pages 125-125
Interannual Variability in Coupled Tropical Atmosphere-Ocean Models....Pages 127-159
Predictability of ENSO....Pages 161-171
ENSO Modelling at MPI....Pages 173-191
Specification and Variability of the Surface Forcing of the Ocean....Pages 193-210
Ocean Models and the Inter-Basin Transport of Heat....Pages 211-224
Extratropical Response to SST Anomalies and the Barotropic Model....Pages 225-232
Modelling of Geochemical Tracers in the Ocean....Pages 233-267
Diapycnal Mixing....Pages 269-293
Climatic Change and Ocean Bottom Water Formation: Are We Missing Something?....Pages 295-317
Reconstruction of Low and Middle Latitude Export Productivity, 30,000 Years BP to Present: Implications for Global Carbon Reservoirs....Pages 319-342
Global Estimation of Oceanic Eddy Transports from Satellite Altimetry?....Pages 343-349
Front Matter....Pages 351-351
Working Group 1: Climate Observations....Pages 353-360
Working Group 2: Modelling....Pages 361-363
Working Group 3: ENSO Modelling and Prediction....Pages 365-369
Front Matter....Pages 351-351
Working Group 4: Climate-Ocean Interaction on Time Scales of Decades to Centuries....Pages 371-373
Working Group 5: Impact of Paleoclimatic Proxy Data on Climate Modeling....Pages 375-377
Back Matter....Pages 379-385
β¦ Subjects
Meteorology/Climatology; Oceanography
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