Published March 16, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP) Phase 2: scientific objectives and experimental design

  • 1. University of Leeds
  • 2. US Geological Survey
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. University of Tokyo
  • 5. National Center for Atmospheric Research
  • 6. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • 7. University of Bristol
  • 8. Northumbria University

Description

The Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP) is a co-ordinated international climate modelling initiative to study and understand climate and environments of the Late Pliocene, as well as their potential relevance in the context of future climate change. PlioMIP examines the consistency of model predictions in simulating Pliocene climate and their ability to reproduce climate signals preserved by geological climate archives. Here we provide a description of the aim and objectives of the next phase of the model intercomparison project (PlioMIP Phase 2), and we present the experimental design and boundary conditions that will be utilized for climate model experiments in Phase 2.

Following on from PlioMIP Phase 1, Phase 2 will continue to be a mechanism for sampling structural uncertainty within climate models. However, Phase 1 demonstrated the requirement to better understand boundary condition uncertainties as well as uncertainty in the methodologies used for data–model comparison. Therefore, our strategy for Phase 2 is to utilize state-of-the-art boundary conditions that have emerged over the last 5 years. These include a new palaeogeographic reconstruction, detailing ocean bathymetry and land–ice surface topography. The ice surface topography is built upon the lessons learned from offline ice sheet modelling studies. Land surface cover has been enhanced by recent additions of Pliocene soils and lakes. Atmospheric reconstructions of palaeo-CO2 are emerging on orbital timescales, and these are also incorporated into PlioMIP Phase 2. New records of surface and sea surface temperature change are being produced that will be more temporally consistent with the boundary conditions and forcings used within models.

Finally we have designed a suite of prioritized experiments that tackle issues surrounding the basic understanding of the Pliocene and its relevance in the context of future climate change in a discrete way.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.5194/cp-12-663-2016
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13726

Funding

European Union
Seventh Framework Programme
Natural Environment Research Council
NE/I016287/1
Natural Environment Research Council
NE/G009112/1
Natural Environment Research Council
NE/H006273/1
United States Geological Survey
Climate and Land Use Change Research and Development Program
NASA
NNX14AB99A

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences