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Paleoclimate modeling in China: A review
Authors:Dabang Jiang  Ge Yu  Ping Zhao  Xing Chen  Jian Liu  Xiaodong Liu  Shaowu Wang  Zhongshi Zhang  Yongqiang Yu  Yuefeng Li  Liya Jin  Ying Xu  Lixia Ju  Tianjun Zhou  Xiaodong Yan
Affiliation:1. Nansen-Zhu International Research Centre, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029;Climate Change Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029
2. State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology,Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008
3. State Key Laboratory of Severe Weather, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, Beijing 100081
4. School of Atmospheric Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093
5. Key Laboratory for Virtual Geographic Environment of Ministry of Education, School of Geography Science,Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023
6. State Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology, Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xi'an 710075
7. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, School of Physics, Peking University, Beijing 100871
Abstract:This paper provides a review of paleoclimate modeling activities in China. Rather than attempt to cover all topics, we have chosen a few climatic intervals and events judged to be particularly informative to the international community. In historical climate simulations, changes in solar radiation and volcanic activity explain most parts of reconstructions over the last millennium prior to the industrial era, while atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations play the most important role in the 20th century warming over China. There is a considerable model-data mismatch in the annual and boreal winter temperature change over China during the mid-Holocene 6000 years before present (ka BP)], while coupled models with an interactive ocean generally perform better than atmospheric models. For the Last Glacial Maximum (21 ka BP), climate models successfully reproduce the surface cooling trend over China but fail to reproduce its magnitude, with a better performance for coupled models. At that time, reconstructed vegetation and western Pacific sea surface temperatures could have significantly affected the East Asian climate, and environmental conditions on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau were most likely very different to the present day. During the late Marine Isotope Stage 3 (30-40 ka BP), orbital forcing and Northern Hemisphere glaciation, as well as vegetation change in China, were likely responsible for East Asian climate change. On the tectonic scale, the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau uplift, the Tethys Sea retreat, and the South China Sea expansion played important roles in the formation of the East Asian monsoon-dominant environment pattern during the late Cenozoic.
Keywords:paleoclimate modeling  China  millennium  orbital scale  tectonic scale
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