Although the Arctic occupies less than 5% of the Earth's surface, it includes some of the strongest positive feedbacks in the climate system. Reconstructing the climate history of the Quaternary requires a suite of climate proxies that can be placed in a secure time frame. Most Arctic proxies reflect past summer temperatures, although a subset is sensitive to winter temperatures and/or precipitation. During the Quaternary, the Arctic has experienced a greater change in temperature, vegetation, and ocean surface characteristics than has any other Northern Hemisphere latitudinal band. Arctic temperature amplification is a consequence of several strong positive feedbacks. They include the fast feedbacks of snow and ice albedo, sea-ice insulati...
The Arctic is one of the regions of the Earth most vulnerable to climate change. Temperatures in the...
The Arctic Holocene Transitions project is an international community-based effort to systematically...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112–140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
As the planet cooled from peak warmth in the early Cenozoic, extensive Northern Hemisphere ice sheet...
Paleoclimatic data provide a highly informative if incomplete history of Arctic climate. Temperature...
lands that now support only polar desert and tundra. Global oceanic and atmospheric circulation was ...
Interpretation of paleoclimate records requires an understanding of Earth’s climate system, the caus...
The warmest millennia of at least the past 250,000 years occurred during the Last Interglaciation, w...
A compilation of paleoclimate records from lake sediments, trees, glaciers, and marine sediments pro...
The warmest millennia of at least the past 250,000 years occurred during the Last Interglaciation, w...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112-140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
Paleoclimate records play a key role in our understanding of Earth’s past and present climate system...
To evaluate the spatial variability of Arctic climate change during the present interglacial, CAPE P...
Terrestrial and marine geological archives in the Arctic contain information on environmental change...
Recent observations in the Arctic have identified large ongoing changes and important climate feedba...
The Arctic is one of the regions of the Earth most vulnerable to climate change. Temperatures in the...
The Arctic Holocene Transitions project is an international community-based effort to systematically...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112–140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
As the planet cooled from peak warmth in the early Cenozoic, extensive Northern Hemisphere ice sheet...
Paleoclimatic data provide a highly informative if incomplete history of Arctic climate. Temperature...
lands that now support only polar desert and tundra. Global oceanic and atmospheric circulation was ...
Interpretation of paleoclimate records requires an understanding of Earth’s climate system, the caus...
The warmest millennia of at least the past 250,000 years occurred during the Last Interglaciation, w...
A compilation of paleoclimate records from lake sediments, trees, glaciers, and marine sediments pro...
The warmest millennia of at least the past 250,000 years occurred during the Last Interglaciation, w...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112-140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
Paleoclimate records play a key role in our understanding of Earth’s past and present climate system...
To evaluate the spatial variability of Arctic climate change during the present interglacial, CAPE P...
Terrestrial and marine geological archives in the Arctic contain information on environmental change...
Recent observations in the Arctic have identified large ongoing changes and important climate feedba...
The Arctic is one of the regions of the Earth most vulnerable to climate change. Temperatures in the...
The Arctic Holocene Transitions project is an international community-based effort to systematically...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112–140 million years ago, the Arctic r...