#FYI #WesternMediterranean #SeaSurfaceTemperature

"The exceptional mediterranean heatwave continues with anomalies close to 8°C above average."
"This is around 9 standard deviations above normal. 5 is considered an exceptional, once in a several thousand year event. This is EXTREME."

https://bsky.app/profile/leonsimons.bsky.social/post/3ltceslxhwc2j

#climate #ClimateScience #climatechange #ClimateEmergency #ClimateCrisis #ClimateBreakdown #climatecatastrophe #globalWarming #globalHeating #ExtremeWeather

Leon Simons (@leonsimons.bsky.social)

It's like something has changed over the Western Mediterranean.... Y-axis extension expected. [contains quote post or other embedded content]

Bluesky Social
Influence Of Atmospheric And Oceanic Circulation Patterns On Precipitation Variability In North Africa With A Focus On Morocco
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-02718-0 <-- shared paper
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[metrology, including regional, is not a subject I know a lot about, but this was an excellent paper to read]
#GIS #spatial #mapping #Morocco #NorthAfrica #meteorology #regional #model #modeling #weather #rainfall #precipitation #temperature #spatialanalysis #spatiotemporal #wetseason #patterns #statistics #geostatistics #climate #climatechange #indicators #teleconnections #seasonal #regression #wavelet #seasurfacetemperature #MediterraneanOscillation #NorthAtlanticOscillation #forecasting #atmosphere #ocean #marine #circulation

Ocean warming is accelerating, not just gradually increasing!

The research indicates that global mean sea surface temperature (GMSST) is rising faster than previously thought. The rate of increase has risen from 0.06 Kelvin per decade (1985-1989) to 0.27 Kelvin per decade (2019-2023). EEA-based model fits the data much better than linear models. Therefore, linear extrapolations of GMSST are likely to underestimate future warming.

#ClimateChange #SeaSurfaceTemperature

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/adaa8a

Radware Captcha Page

Climate Reanalyzer

Sea surface temperature (SST) data visualizations

Replicability of paleotemperature records in the northern Okinawa Trough and its implications for paleoceanographic reconstructions - Progress in Earth and Planetary Science

Geochemical proxies are frequently utilized in the reconstruction of past ocean temperatures. Due to resource constraints, these reconstructions typically rely on a single sediment core, raising questions about the local and regional representativeness of paleotemperature records. To address this, we analyzed four sediment cores located within a 10-km radius in the northern Okinawa Trough (OT), which share the same climatic forcing and thus should reflect similar climate variations. We compiled published data and generated new paleotemperature estimates based on three widely used geochemical proxies (foraminiferal Mg/Ca, $${\text{U}}_{37}^{{{\text{K}}^{\prime}}}$$ U 37 K ′ , $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 ). Analysis of the mean absolute deviations for nearby records based on the same proxy revealed that $${\text{U}}_{37}^{{{\text{K}}^{\prime}}}$$ U 37 K ′ has the highest reproducibility, followed by Mg/Ca and $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 . However, inconsistencies in inter-proxy offsets among nearby sites suggest the presence of noise in the proxy records, likely stemming from instrumental errors and sediment heterogeneity. Furthermore, the Mg/Ca and $${\text{U}}_{37}^{{{\text{K}}^{\prime}}}$$ U 37 K ′ paleotemperature records agree within uncertainty when accounting for inter-site variability and calibration uncertainties, challenging previous interpretations of temperature signals from different seasons. All proxies indicate similar glacial-interglacial trends, albeit with varying magnitudes of temperature change. Both Mg/Ca and $${\text{U}}_{37}^{{{\text{K}}^{\prime}}}$$ U 37 K ′ records suggest a glacial cooling of ~ 3 °C, whereas $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 sea surface temperature (SST) data indicate a stronger glacial cooling of approximately ~ 6–8 °C. Modern observations indicate a subsurface $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 recording depth of 50–100 m, coinciding with the thermocline. However, the $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 subsurface temperature (subT) record does not resemble the Mg/Ca records of thermocline-dwelling foraminifera species. Instead, there is a better agreement with benthic foraminiferal Mg/Ca records of Uvigerina spp. (~ 700 m) and the intermediate temperature record derived from radiolarian assemblages (~ 500 m), pointing to a $${\text{TEX}}_{86}$$ TEX 86 recording depth that is deeper than the thermocline. In summary, our findings show that proxy noise can impact inter-proxy comparisons of paleotemperature records, but not the direction of glacial-interglacial shifts. Future research should prioritize constraining the recording depth of paleotemperature proxies and reducing calibration uncertainty for more precise and reliable quantitative paleotemperature reconstruction.

SpringerOpen
My co-authored #scientific #publication by De Jonge et al. (2024) G³ just got cited in this new #paper with a multi-#biomarker paleo-sequence:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2024.104620
Also featuring a novel (OH-)isoGDGT-based #paleotemperature #ClimateProxy!
Disclaimer: I am not a co-author and I was not a reviewer either.
#Science
#ScienceMastodon #AcademicMastodon
#PaleoClimate #SeaTemperature #SeaSurfaceTemperature #SST
#Biomarkers #Alkenones #Diols #LongChainDiols #GDGTs #isoGDGTs
https://mastodon.world/@nina_davtian/113364845688520878
Multi-proxy reconstructions of paleotemperature in the southern South China Sea since the last deglaciation

The accuracy of paleothermometers is a prerequisite for understanding the past sea surface temperature (SST) changes in the tropical seas. Here, we an…

#Halloween is soon and so is the beginning of a new #chapter of my #academic #career!
For this reason, I reintroduce one of my most significant first-authored #research articles (Davtian et al., 2021 #Paleoceanography and #Paleoclimatology):
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020PA004077
More details in the #thread below: (1/15)

#Science
#ScienceMastodon #AcademicMastodon
#Paper #Scientific #Publication
#PaleoClimate #ClimateChange
#ClimateProxies #SeaSurfaceTemperature
#NorthAtlantic #AtlanticOcean #Atlantic #Ocean

Good to see the CR graphs of Sea Surface Temperature are back. The data is still WELL about the mean and the trend is still horrifying, but the numbers are back.

#ClimateCrisis
#ClimateEmergency
#SeaSurfaceTemperature

Ocean weather drives land weather. How it is.

https://climatereanalyzer.org/clim/sst_daily/?dm_id=world2

Climate Reanalyzer

Sea surface temperature (SST) data visualizations

Ocean Heat for Hurricane Helene

Warm water from the Loop Current helped fuel Helene as the storm approached Florida’s Big Bend region.