Abstract

While it is widely accepted that the global mean atmospheric temperature has increased in recent decades, the spatial distribution of global warming has been complex. In this study we comprehensively characterize the spatial pattern, including vertical structure, of temperature trends along the subtropical west coast of South America (continental Chile) for the period 1979–2006 and examine their consistency with expectations based on the CMIP‐3 ensemble of coupled ocean‐atmosphere simulations for the late 20th century. In central and northern Chile (17°–37°S) the most notable feature is a strong contrast between surface cooling at coastal stations (−0.2°C/decade) and warming in the Andes (+0.25°C/decade), only 100–200 km further inland. Coastal radiosonde data imply that the coast‐Andes variation is largely due to strong vertical stratification of temperature trends in the atmosphere west of the Andes. The coastal cooling appears to form part of a larger‐scale, La Niña‐like pattern and may extend below the ocean mixed layer to depths of at least 500 m. Over continental Chile the CMIP‐3 GCM ensemble predicts temperature trends similar to those observed in the Andes. The cooling along the Chilean coast is not reproduced by the models, but the mean SST warming is weaker there than any other part of the world except the Southern Ocean. It is proposed that the intensification of the South Pacific Anticyclone during recent decades, which is also a simulated consequence of global warming, is likely to play a major role in maintaining cooler temperatures off the coast of Chile.

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