Abstract
A brief overview of reliably established global climate events in the Holocene is provided. On the basis of high-precision astronomical ephemeris with high spatial and temporal resolution, the annual and seasonal insolation of the Earth and hemispheres was calculated for the period 3000 BC-AD 2999. According to the results of calculations, the values of insolation contrast were obtained in a generalized manner (for the regions of the heat source and sink), reflecting the changes in the meridional insolation gradient that controls the meridional heat transfer in the hemispheres. The character of long-term variations of both the annual and seasonal arrival, and the annual and seasonal meridional transport of radiation heat in the hemispheres was obtained. The long-term distribution of insolation characteristics of the Earth and hemispheres (annual and seasonal insolation and insolation contrast in the hemispheres) is analyzed. The synchronicity of the extrema of the irradiation characteristics with the global climatic event in the history of the Earth (the Medieval Warm Period of the Holocene) was revealed. On the basis of the revealed synchronicity, the maximum insolation contrast in the winter half of the year in the Northern Hemisphere (the maximum of meridional heat transfer in the winter half of the year), as well as the maximum of interhemispheric heat transfer may be determined to be the reasons for the Medieval Warm Period.
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