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Reconstructing the coupled Greenland Ice Sheet–climate evolution during the Last Interglacial warm period

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During the Last Interglacial (LIG), approximately 130-118 thousand years ago (ka), the Arctic experienced relative warmth and global sea levels considerably higher than modern.  While this interval is thus considered key for understanding long-term ice–climate feedbacks under warm-state climate conditions, large uncertainties remain surrounding i. the magnitude and spatial expression of LIG global temperature change, ii. the relative contributions of the Antarctic vs. Greenlandic Ice Sheets (GrIS) to LIG sea level rise, and iii. the sensitivity of the GrIS to centennial- to millennial-scale ocean-atmospheric forcing.  Here, we present, to our knowledge, a first attempt at reconstructing the coupled GrIS–climate evolution during the LIG using an internally consistent offline “paleoclimate data assimilation” approach.  Our methodology combines a newly compiled database of nearly 400 chronologically consistent marine geochemical and ice sheet-derived climate-proxy records (spanning 250 sites globally) with recently developed, state-of-the-art transient simulations of the LIG using the coupled Community Earth System Model v2 featuring an interactive Community Ice Sheet Model v2 (CESM2-CISM2).  Our preliminary assimilations suggest LIG peak global mean surface warming of +0.1-0.5˚C (±2 range) above the pre-industrial state, arising from enhanced and widespread (>2-5˚C) high Arctic warming.  Leveraging our CESM2-coupled CISM2 results, we further identify a max GrIS contribution of 2.0 (±0.6) meters of sea level rise equivalent at around 125 ka, nearly ~two millennia after peak LIG climate forcing.  These initial results provide a new proxy-model integration framework for reconciling past GrIS contributions to global sea level rise and benchmark the potential long-term sensitivity of the GrIS to ongoing Arctic warming.
Title: Reconstructing the coupled Greenland Ice Sheet–climate evolution during the Last Interglacial warm period
Description:
During the Last Interglacial (LIG), approximately 130-118 thousand years ago (ka), the Arctic experienced relative warmth and global sea levels considerably higher than modern.
 While this interval is thus considered key for understanding long-term ice–climate feedbacks under warm-state climate conditions, large uncertainties remain surrounding i.
the magnitude and spatial expression of LIG global temperature change, ii.
the relative contributions of the Antarctic vs.
Greenlandic Ice Sheets (GrIS) to LIG sea level rise, and iii.
the sensitivity of the GrIS to centennial- to millennial-scale ocean-atmospheric forcing.
  Here, we present, to our knowledge, a first attempt at reconstructing the coupled GrIS–climate evolution during the LIG using an internally consistent offline “paleoclimate data assimilation” approach.
  Our methodology combines a newly compiled database of nearly 400 chronologically consistent marine geochemical and ice sheet-derived climate-proxy records (spanning 250 sites globally) with recently developed, state-of-the-art transient simulations of the LIG using the coupled Community Earth System Model v2 featuring an interactive Community Ice Sheet Model v2 (CESM2-CISM2).
  Our preliminary assimilations suggest LIG peak global mean surface warming of +0.
1-0.
5˚C (±2 range) above the pre-industrial state, arising from enhanced and widespread (>2-5˚C) high Arctic warming.
  Leveraging our CESM2-coupled CISM2 results, we further identify a max GrIS contribution of 2.
0 (±0.
6) meters of sea level rise equivalent at around 125 ka, nearly ~two millennia after peak LIG climate forcing.
  These initial results provide a new proxy-model integration framework for reconciling past GrIS contributions to global sea level rise and benchmark the potential long-term sensitivity of the GrIS to ongoing Arctic warming.

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