The @IPCC_CH report is out, so let's talk about #drought. There are major advances in the report on this. In the last report (8 years ago) scientists weren't sure whether some of the bad droughts we were seeing were caused by humans. Things have changed. 1/
First, what is a #drought? It's complicated! You need low rainfall, but things that "remove" water from land (wind, temperature, evaporation) are also important. In Chapter 8 you'll find a diagram with all these factors. We tried to make it simple, but 🤣 2/
Where has human influence made drought worse so far? Two hot spots are western North America and the Mediterranean. These places are labeled in the SPM with brown hexagons and double dots (more confidence in human influence) 3/
What is interesting about these places is that it is not low amounts of rain that has been causing bad droughts. It's high temperatures (a consequence of rising greenhouse gases) leading to so-called "hot droughts" 4/
"Hot drought" happens because when the atmosphere is warmer, it is also thirster. A warm atmosphere evaporates more water out of soils, making droughts worse. So for the same reduction in rainfall, you get a more severe drought 5/
An example: the 2012-2014 drought in California. An analysis of tree ring data by @thirstygecko & @locallyabsent demonstrated that this drought was not unusual in terms of low rain but once you considered soil moisture, it was amongst the worst in 800 years! 6/
Let's shift to the future. What can we expect under higher emissions? This map from FAQ 8.3 highlights places where projections suggest droughts will get worse. 7/
Unsurprisingly, many semi-arid places (western NA, Med, Chile, SW Australia, S Africa) are expected to get drier but some wet places are on this map as well, like the Caribbean and the Amazon. 8/
Figure 8.19 shows in more detail how the projected changes scale with emissions scenario. In this plot, Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD) is used as a metric for how "thirsty" the atmosphere is. Soil moisture reflects the balance of precipitation, evaporation, and transpiration. 9/
Bottom line: More emissions = thirstier atmosphere = more severe droughts. If we cut emissions sooner rather than later we can avoid the worse-case scenarios. /fin #ClimateReport#IPCC
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I am 🌟thrilled 🌟that this is finally published! Led by my postdoc Matt Osman (no Twitter) let me introduce the first spatial reconstruction of climate changes since the Last Ice Age, the “Last Glacial Maximum Reanalysis”, out today in Nature 1/ nature.com/articles/s4158…
To create the LGMR, we blended info from over 500 geochemical records of sea-surface temperature with climate model simulations using data assimilation. The geological data aren’t evenly spaced in time, so bringing in the model helps us go from point estimates (below) 2/…
...to full maps of past climate! Here’s an animation of temperature anomalies (difference from preindustrial conditions) through time 3/
One cool part of the #IPCCReport is that it uses not only observations and models to inform climate change but also GEOLOGY, in the form of paleoclimate. Paleoclimate is what I do (!) so naturally, I've got a 🧵 😁 1/
First, what is "paleoclimate"? It is the study of past climate change, over multiple timescales. Could be hundreds of years in the past, could be millions. How do we do this? We measure things in natural archives of past climate change 2/
Archives can be tree rings (annual), ice cores (thousands of years) or deep marine sediment cores (hundreds to millions of years) or rocks (billion of years). They all have unique strengths but together expand our record of past climate by orders of magnitude 3/
This has been the news recently, so let's go over what the @IPCC_CH has to say about whether the Gulf Stream will shut down in the coming decades. Short answer: it's not likely to happen. Long answer: keep reading 1/ washingtonpost.com/climate-enviro…
Chapter 9 has an *awesome* FAQ (shout out to @baylorfk ) about this which I encourage you to read. It starts by clarifying what exactly the Gulf Stream is, which is important 2/
The Gulf Stream is a warm current that flows off of the eastern United States. At these latitudes it is part of the subtropical gyre, which is driven by winds. These winds (trades, westerlies) are going to blow no matter what, so there will always be a Gulf Stream 3/
The @IPCC_CH report will be released in the early AM tonight. I helped author it, and tomorrow I'll tweet about some of the findings re: #drought which was one of the things I worked on. In the meantime, it's worthwhile knowing a few things about the process 1/
IPCC authors like myself do not get paid! We volunteer. It's a three year commitment and it becomes a deep part of your life. Why do we do it? Because we care about making sure the world knows about what has happened and what will happen if we don't cut emissions. 2/
The text in the IPCC report went through two rounds of public peer review, during which time anyone (I mean anyone!) could read the draft and submit comments. The authors have to respond to *every* comment (there are thousands). #accountability 3/
So, do you all know who the lead author is of that 42,000-yr climate event Science paper? It's this guy. nature.com/articles/d4158…
This totally fits with the energy of the paper, which makes unsupported claims about both the genetics and paleoclimate data. Here's a great thread about problems with the former
For the latter, all you have to do is have a quick look at some of the best climate records we have - ice cores (high latitude) and speleothems (tropics), to see that *nothing happens* at 42,000 years.
It's #FigureFriday, so let's chat about my favorite subject: color palettes 🎨 for climate science visualization! (1/12)
First, why is it important? Put simply: a beautiful figure can communicate your results more effectively than text. It can make a figure more understandable to a public audience. So it is worth it to put care into your figure design. (2/12)
First, if you're plotting up climate model data, especially anomalies, I highly recommend Cynthia Brewer's palettes on ColorBrewer. BrBG is my go-to for precip anomalies, and RdBu is a natural for temperature. (3/12) colorbrewer2.org/#type=divergin…