Pacific Ocean Warming at Fastest Rate in 10,000 Years
Finally, we need to maintain a healthy skepticism about broad conclusions about global climate drawn from one specific region
like the tropical IndoPacific. It is surprising in this context that
the article didn't mention or cite two studies published in the same
journal (Science), a few years ago: Mann et al (2009) and Trouet et al
(2009) which demonstrate a high degree of regional heterogeneity in
global temperature changes over the past millennium. Both studies
attribute much of that heterogeneity to dynamical climate responses
related to the El Niño phenomenon. The tropical Pacific appears to have been in an anomalous La Niña-like
state during the Medieval era. During such a state, which is the
flip-side of El Niño, much of the tropical Pacific (the eastern and
central tropical Pacific) is unusually cold. But the tropical western
Pacific and IndoPacific are especially warm. That makes it perilous to
draw inferences about global-scale warmth from this region (see this more detailed discussion at RealClimate).
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