Cause-and-effect relationships between sea surface temperature changes in different regions during the past 4.5 million years
Cause-and-effect relationships between sea surface temperature changes in different regions during the past 4.5 million years
Understanding long-term cause-and-effect relationships between changes at different locations and temporal scales is crucial for unraveling the key mechanisms that drive climate dynamics and their impacts on ecosystems and society. Here, we focus on deconvolving different modes of Sea Surface Temperature (SST) variability and the coupling between different ocean regions at timescales of orbital (Milankovitch) variability. To do so, we apply Multivariate Empirical Mode Decomposition (MEMD) and Linear Response Theory (LRT). Through MEMD, we identify significant SST amplitude modulations at Milankovitch timescales, correlations between oceanic regions, and a both spatially and temporally variable long-term cooling trend through the last 4 million years. Through LRT we assess nonlinear causal inference at different timescales, highlighting significant SST coupling between extratropical regions and both the Indian-Pacific Warm Pool and the Eastern Tropical Pacific at multi-millennial scales. Our methodology offers first insight into causal connections at different timescales and locations, and into how the large-scale redistribution of oceanic heat across latitudes, especially between equatorial and polar regions, potentially influences ocean circulation and, consequently, the observed pattern of SST fluctuations.
Alberti, T.
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Stumpo, M.
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Florindo, F.
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Rohling, E.J.
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21 June 2025
Alberti, T.
7f7f113e-cf6d-4da7-bcba-a5ff5dc42d47
Stumpo, M.
1adac730-6167-4dc2-83d1-2dec694c6636
Florindo, F.
5953170b-79f7-431e-9e08-824a47e0fbd5
Rohling, E.J.
a2a27ef2-fcce-4c71-907b-e692b5ecc685
Alberti, T., Stumpo, M., Florindo, F. and Rohling, E.J.
(2025)
Cause-and-effect relationships between sea surface temperature changes in different regions during the past 4.5 million years.
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 40 (6), [e2024PA004936].
(doi:10.1029/2024PA004936).
Abstract
Understanding long-term cause-and-effect relationships between changes at different locations and temporal scales is crucial for unraveling the key mechanisms that drive climate dynamics and their impacts on ecosystems and society. Here, we focus on deconvolving different modes of Sea Surface Temperature (SST) variability and the coupling between different ocean regions at timescales of orbital (Milankovitch) variability. To do so, we apply Multivariate Empirical Mode Decomposition (MEMD) and Linear Response Theory (LRT). Through MEMD, we identify significant SST amplitude modulations at Milankovitch timescales, correlations between oceanic regions, and a both spatially and temporally variable long-term cooling trend through the last 4 million years. Through LRT we assess nonlinear causal inference at different timescales, highlighting significant SST coupling between extratropical regions and both the Indian-Pacific Warm Pool and the Eastern Tropical Pacific at multi-millennial scales. Our methodology offers first insight into causal connections at different timescales and locations, and into how the large-scale redistribution of oceanic heat across latitudes, especially between equatorial and polar regions, potentially influences ocean circulation and, consequently, the observed pattern of SST fluctuations.
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Paleoceanog and Paleoclimatol - 2025 - Alberti - Cause‐and‐Effect Relationships Between Sea Surface Temperature Changes in
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 June 2025
Published date: 21 June 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 504376
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504376
ISSN: 2572-4525
PURE UUID: 9071b87c-fb75-4004-b66e-339de873331a
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Date deposited: 08 Sep 2025 17:01
Last modified: 09 Sep 2025 01:35
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Author:
T. Alberti
Author:
M. Stumpo
Author:
F. Florindo
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