Title of article :
Ground Surface Warming History in Northern Canada Inferred from Inversions of Temperature Logs and Comparison with Other Proxy Climate Reconstructions
Author/Authors :
Jacek A. Majorowicz، نويسنده , , Walter R. Skinner، نويسنده , , Jan Safanda ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Well temperature logs from 61 sites located in discontinuous and continuous permafrost
regions of northern Canada are analyzed. The method of functional space inversion (FSI) is applied to the
set of precise temperature logs from wells located between 60 and 82 N. There is strong evidence of
extensive ground surface temperature (GST) warming beginning in the late 18th century and lasting until
the 20th century. This was preceded by a lengthy period of cooling. The approximate average increase of
the surface temperature of Canadian Arctic, based on all individual GST histories, is > 1.3 C for the last
200 years. Simultaneous inversion of all well temperature data suggests an even higher warming
(approximately 2 C). There has been no strong south-to-north gradient in the ground warming magnitude
when northern Canadian data are compared with eastern and central Canadian data south of 60 N which
also shows warming close to 2 C. In Alaska, warming of some 2 C has been restricted mainly to the 20th
century. In general, however, a high warming magnitude is common for most of Canada and Alaska for
the previous century. The averaged GST history (GSTH) for the Canadian Arctic is calibrated with and
compares visually with a variety of recently published regional and hemispheric proxy climate
reconstructions. These show that GST warming derived from well temperature logs is generally higher
than one shown by other proxy (mainly tree-ring reconstructions).
Keywords :
regional climate variability and change , GLOBAL WARMING , borehole temperatures , groundtemperatures.
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics