Abstract

Abstract. Combining proxy information and climate model simulations reconciles these sources of information about past climates. This, in turn, strengthens our understanding of past climatic changes. The analogue or proxy surrogate reconstruction method is a computationally cheap data assimilation approach, which searches in a pool of simulated climate states the best fit to proxy data. We use the approach to reconstruct European summer mean temperature from the 13th century until present using the Euro 2k set of proxy records and a pool of global climate simulation output fields. Our focus is on quantifying the uncertainty of the reconstruction, because previous applications of the analogue method rarely provided uncertainty ranges. We show several ways of estimating reconstruction uncertainty for the analogue method, which take into account the non-climate part of the variability in each proxy record. In general, our reconstruction agrees well at multi-decadal timescales with the Euro 2k reconstruction, which was conducted with two different statistical methods and no information from model simulations. In both methodological approaches, the decades around the year 1600 CE were the coldest. However, the approaches disagree on the warmest pre-industrial periods. The reconstructions from the analogue method also represent the local variations of the observed proxies. The diverse uncertainty estimates obtained from our analogue approaches can be locally larger or smaller than the estimates from the Euro 2k effort. Local uncertainties of the temperature reconstructions tend to be large in areas that are poorly covered by the proxy records. Uncertainties highlight the ambiguity of field-based reconstructions constrained by a limited set of proxies.

Highlights

  • There have been numerous efforts to reconstruct regional to global surface temperature for the last 500 to 2000 years

  • The paradigm that past analogues may provide information for anthropogenic climate changes is pervasive in climate science (Dahl-Jensen et al, 2015; Schmidt, 2010; Schmidt et al, 2014) but the origin of the analogue method lies in weather forecasting

  • While we show a single best-analogue reconstruction and a reconstruction based on a fixed number of analogues, we add a reconstruction that explicitly considers the uncertainty of the proxy records in the selection of the analogue fields

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Summary

Introduction

There have been numerous efforts to reconstruct regional to global surface temperature for the last 500 to 2000 years. Many of the statistical reconstruction methods essentially assume a linear relationship between proxy information and temperature data. We apply a non-linear method, the analogue method, to reconstruct the mean European summer temperature over the past 750 years in annual resolution. The core of the analogue method is the search for similar spatial patterns in simulated temperature data compared to the proxy records. The method originated during the Second World War when the US Air Force catalogued weather situations of previous decades as a means of longrange weather forecasting. In this approach, forecasters obtain forecasts by analogy between current observations and a past set of weather patterns (Namias, 1948). Modern analogue techniques of paleoecology follow a similar idea (e.g., Graumlich, 1993; Jackson and Williams, 2004)

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