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      Glacial cooling and climate sensitivity revisited

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          Most cited references59

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          The Community Earth System Model: A Framework for Collaborative Research

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            The surface of the ice-age Earth.

            (1976)
            In the Northern Hemisphere the 18,000 B.P. world differed strikingly from the present in the huge land-based ice sheets, reaching approximately 3 km in thickness, and in a dramatic increase in the extent of pack ice and marine-based ice sheets. In the Southern Hemisphere the most striking contrast was the greater extent of sea ice. On land, grasslands, steppes, and deserts spread at the expense of forests. This change in vegetation, together with extensive areas of permanent ice and sandy outwash plains, caused an increase in global surface albedo over modern values. Sea level was lower by at least 85 m. The 18,000 B.P. oceans were characterized by: (i) marked steepening of thermal gradients along polar frontal systems, particularly in the North Atlantic and Antarctic; (ii) an equatorward displacement of polar frontal systems; (iii) general cooling of most surface waters, with a global average of -2.3 degrees C; (iv) increased cooling and up-welling along equatorial divergences in the Pacific and Atlantic; (v) low temperatures extending equatorward along the western coast of Africa, Australia, and South America, indicating increased upwelling and advection of cool waters; and (vi) nearly stable positions and temperatures of the central gyres in the subtropical Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans.
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              Climate change, phenology, and phenological control of vegetation feedbacks to the climate system

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Nature
                Nature
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                August 27 2020
                August 26 2020
                August 27 2020
                : 584
                : 7822
                : 569-573
                Article
                10.1038/s41586-020-2617-x
                32848226
                9bd29917-279a-4881-97fd-3157a10d963e
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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