Permanent El Niño-like conditions during the Pliocene warm period

MW Wara, AC Ravelo, ML Delaney - Science, 2005 - science.org
MW Wara, AC Ravelo, ML Delaney
Science, 2005science.org
During the warm early Pliocene (∼ 4.5 to 3.0 million years ago), the most recent interval with
a climate warmer than today, the eastern Pacific thermocline was deep and the average
west-to-east sea surface temperature difference across the equatorial Pacific was only
1.5±0.9° C, much like it is during a modern El Niño event. Thus, the modern strong sea
surface temperature gradient across the equatorial Pacific is not a stable and permanent
feature. Sustained El Niño-like conditions, including relatively weak zonal atmospheric …
During the warm early Pliocene (∼4.5 to 3.0 million years ago), the most recent interval with a climate warmer than today, the eastern Pacific thermocline was deep and the average west-to-east sea surface temperature difference across the equatorial Pacific was only 1.5 ± 0.9°C, much like it is during a modern El Niño event. Thus, the modern strong sea surface temperature gradient across the equatorial Pacific is not a stable and permanent feature. Sustained El Niño-like conditions, including relatively weak zonal atmospheric (Walker) circulation, could be a consequence of, and play an important role in determining, global warmth.
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