Abstract

Abstract. Here we present the experimental design and results from a new mid-Pliocene simulation using the latest version of the UK's physical climate model, HadGEM3-GC31-LL, conducted under the auspices of CMIP6/PMIP4/PlioMIP2. Although two other palaeoclimate simulations have been recently run using this model, they both focused on more recent periods within the Quaternary, and therefore this is the first time this version of the UK model has been run this far back in time. The mid-Pliocene Warm Period, ∼3 Ma, is of particular interest because it represents a time period when the Earth was in equilibrium with CO2 concentrations roughly equivalent to those of today, providing a possible analogue for current and future climate change. The implementation of the Pliocene boundary conditions is firstly described in detail, based on the PRISM4 dataset, including CO2, ozone, orography, ice mask, lakes, vegetation fractions and vegetation functional types. These were incrementally added into the model, to change from a pre-industrial setup to a Pliocene setup. The results of the simulation are then presented, which are firstly compared with the model's pre-industrial simulation, secondly with previous versions of the same model and with available proxy data, and thirdly with all other models included in PlioMIP2. Firstly, the comparison with the pre-industrial simulation suggests that the Pliocene simulation is consistent with current understanding and existing work, showing warmer and wetter conditions, and with the greatest warming occurring over high-latitude and polar regions. The global mean surface air temperature anomaly at the end of the Pliocene simulation is 5.1 ∘C, which is the second highest of all models included in PlioMIP2 and is consistent with the fact that HadGEM3-GC31-LL has one of the highest Effective Climate Sensitivities of all CMIP6 models. Secondly, the comparison with previous generation models and with proxy data suggests a clear increase in global sea surface temperatures as the model has undergone development. Up to a certain level of warming, this results in a better agreement with available proxy data, and the “sweet spot” appears to be the previous CMIP5 generation of the model, HadGEM2-AO. The most recent simulation presented here, however, appears to show poorer agreement with the proxy data compared with HadGEM2 and may be overly sensitive to the Pliocene boundary conditions, resulting in a climate that is too warm. Thirdly, the comparison with other models from PlioMIP2 further supports this conclusion, with HadGEM3-GC31-LL being one of the warmest and wettest models in all of PlioMIP2, and if all the models are ordered according to agreement with proxy data, HadGEM3-GC31-LL ranks approximately halfway among them. A caveat to these results is the relatively short run length of the simulation, meaning the model is not in full equilibrium. Given the computational cost of the model it was not possible to run it for a longer period; a Gregory plot analysis indicates that had it been allowed to come to full equilibrium, the final global mean surface temperature could have been approximately 1.5 ∘C higher.

Highlights

  • Model simulations of past climate states are useful because, among other aspects, they allow us to interrogate the mechanisms that have caused past climate change (Haywood et al, 2020; Lunt et al, 2021)

  • The impact of the ozone modification could be explored in future work, for example by using an ozone profile from a UKESM1 simulation with a higher mean surface temperature or by using the methodology outlined in Hardiman et al (2019), which was used for the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) scenario simulations with HadGEM3

  • This study has introduced the mid-Pliocene simulation using the latest version of the UK’s physical climate model, HadGEM3-GC31-LL, presented a new experimental design, and conducted a model–model and model–data comparison

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Summary

Introduction

Model simulations of past climate states are useful because, among other aspects, they allow us to interrogate the mechanisms that have caused past climate change (Haywood et al, 2020; Lunt et al, 2021). Before models can be used in this way, it is important to validate them by comparing with geological data, where available, from the time periods of interest Such model–data comparisons can be useful for evaluating the model outside of the modern climate states that it was likely tuned to, thereby providing an independent assessment of the model that can be important for interpreting any future climate projections arising from the model To what extent has the development of new boundary conditions and more complex models led to improvements in the simulation of the Pliocene by UK Met Office models?

How does HadGEM3-GC31-LL compare with other models participating in PlioMIP2?
Naming conventions and terminology
Full Pliocene experiment design
Model description
Changes to boundary and initial conditions
Changes to input parameters
Modified piControl simulation
Spin-up phase
Atmospheric and oceanic equilibrium of the mPWP simulation
Comparison of HadGEM3 with other models and proxy data
Model–model comparison
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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