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Simulation of Desert Dust Cycles in an Atmospheric General Circulation Model (Abstract)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

S. Joussaume
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, 24 rue Lhomond, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France
I. Rasool
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, 24 rue Lhomond, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France
R. Sadourny
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, 24 rue Lhomond, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France
J.- R. Petit
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Géophysique, 2 rue Très-Cloîtres, 38031 Grenoble Cedex, France
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1984

1 Introduction

Water isotopes are important palaeoclimatic tracers. The dependency of isotope content of precipitation on certain climatic parameters is widely used to reconstruct palaeo-data sets: primarily temperatures (Reference Lorius, Merlivat, Jouzel and PourchetLorius and others 1979), taking into account the linear relation between the deuterium or oxygen 18 content of precipitation and the mean air temperature at the sampling site (Reference DansgaardDansgaard 1964), and, further, the relative humidity of air masses which is shown by a simple model (Reference Jouzel, Merlivat and LoriusJouzel and others 1982) to depend on the relation between the two isotopes.

Until now, the only theoretical models developed to explain these relations were based on highly schematic overviews of the dynamical history of isolated air masses and therefore could not take into account the variations in the ocean surface characteristics or in the atmospheric circulation which may occur during important climatic changes. In fact, the only way to include such variations is to proceed to detailed simulations of the two isotopic cycles 1n general circulation models of the atmosphere (GCMA).

2 Modelling

The HDO and H2 180 cycles have been modelled in the GCM of the atmosphere developed at the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (LMD). They follow all the formulations of the basic water cycle of the model {surface evaporation, boundary-layer diffusion, transport,’ convective diffusion, condensation, re-evaporation, precipitation); however, the isotopes are differentiated at each phase change through fractionation processes depending on differences in saturation pressure and molecular diffusivity.

The two critical points of the modelling design were the following: (i) to ensure a consistent transport of all three isotopic mixing ratios, the numerical scheme used for the transport must be chosen very carefully (for example the isotopic mixing ratios must remain absolutely positive), (ii) the parameterization of convective clouds used in the LMD model (Reference Sadourny, Laval and BergerSadourny and Laval in press) does not provide a detailed description of the motion of air parcels. Therefore it does not give information about where and at which temperature condensation actually occurs. Since this information is essential for a proper representation of the fractionation processes, we must make some crude assumptions: we consider that total mixing occurs within the cloud and that the temperature of condensation is also that of the cloud base.

A schematic description of the various kinds of fractionation processes formulated in the model is as follows.

  • (i) Surface evaporation

    Fractionation occurs only over oceans or during condensation.

  • (ii) Cloud processes (Reference Jouzel, Fritz and FontesJouzel in press)

    • (a) Condensation. In the case of snow-crystal formation, we use the Rayleigh or “open system” assumption. In the case of liquid formation, we use either the “open system” or the “closed system” assumptions in two parallel experiments.

    • (b) Evaporation. No fractionation occurs during sublimation. For liquid evaporation, isotopic equilibrium is assumed.

      Kinetic fractionation is added in the case of formation of snow crystals and re-evaporation of large drops under a cumulus cloud base.

3 Numerical Experiment

A numerical experiment has been performed with a low resolution version (32 points in longitude, 24 in latitude, 11 levels) of the LMD GCMA under January conditions. Values for the initial conditions for the vapour isotope ratios were chosen to be significantly smaller than the observed values.

We show here partial results concerning the closed system hypothesis for liquid formation, without kinetic fractionation. Figure 1(a) displays the 20- day average simulated 180 content of precipitation which can be compared to the annual mean observed field in Figure 1(b) (IAEA 1981). The planetary-scale structure 1n middle-to-high northern latitudes is realistic and well correlated to temperature gradients. In the tropics, maximum values are in good agreement with observations, but the field has a rather strong variability (correlated to the structure of precipitation), which does not appear on the observed fields perhaps because of the annual mean. Values for Antarctica are reasonable for coastal regions, but too high for the interior; this could be due to the low resolution used, which also yields too high temperatures.

Fig. 1 (a) 20–day average simulated 18° content of precipitation for January, compared to (b) mean annual observed 180 content of precipitation (from IAEA 1981). Unit: ‰; isolines every 2‰.

In Figure 2, the 20-day average 180 content of precipitation shows a good correlation with the 20-day average surface air temperature. At temperatures greater than 273 K, the gradient is smaller, as it is in observations, and the dispersion is realistic. At temperatures lower than 273 K, the slope is reasonable but values are generally too high compared to Reference DansgaardDansgaard’s (1964) results.

Fig. 2 20-day average simulated 180 content of precipitation as a function of the 20-day average simulated air-surface temperature.

Continuous lines: regression lines for T < 273 K: δ180 = 0.51T – 149.7, and for T > 273 K:

δ18O = 0.157 T – 50.9;

Dashed line corresponds to Dansgaard’s observations (1964):

δ18O = 0.695 T – 203.4.

Some IAEA (1981) observations are also plotted (black circles).

The relation between D and 18O contents of 20-day average precipitation is shown in Figure 3. The high ratios (>−10‰) are in good agreement with the experimental results (Reference CraigCraig 1961) with a realistic dispersion. The lower ratios (<−10‰) are well correlated but with a deuterium excess (δD – 8δ18O) less than observed ones.

Fig. 3 20-day average simulated D content of precipitation as a function of the 20-day average simulated 18O content of precipitation. Continuous line corresponds to the regression line

δD = 9.6 δ18O + 20.5.

Dashed line corresponds to observations (Reference CraigCraig 1961): δD = 8.0 δ18O + 10.

4 Conclusion

To conclude, the results for the isotopes are in good agreement with the observations except for the ratios at higher latitudes which tend to be too high and associated with low deuterium excess, a defect we want to improve before attempting any palaeoclimatic reconstruction.

References

Craig, H 1961 Isotopic variations in meteoric waters. Science 133: 17021703 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dansgaard, W 1964 Stable isotopes in precipitation. Tellus 16(4): 436468 Google Scholar
IAEA 1981 Stable isotope hydrology: deuterium and oxygen 18 in the water cycle. International Atomic Energy Agency. Technical Report Series 210 Google Scholar
Jouzel, J In press Isotopes on cloud physics: multiphase and multistage condensation processes. In Fritz, P, Fontes, J C (eds) Handbook of environmental isotope chemistry. Vol 2. Amsterdam, Elsevier Google Scholar
Jouzel, J, Merlivat, L, Lorius, C 1982 Deuterium excess in an East Antarctic ice core suggests higher relative humidity at the oceanic surface during the last glacial maximum. Nature 299(5885): 688691 Google Scholar
Lorius, C, Merlivat, L, Jouzel, J, Pourchet, M 1979 A 30,000-yr isotope climatic record from Antarctic ice. Nature 280(5724): 644648 Google Scholar
Sadourny, R, Laval, K In press January and July performance of the LMD circulation model. In Berger, A (ed) Recent advances in climate modelling. Amsterdam, Elsevier Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 (a) 20–day average simulated 18° content of precipitation for January, compared to (b) mean annual observed 180 content of precipitation (from IAEA 1981). Unit: ‰; isolines every 2‰.

Figure 1

Fig. 2 20-day average simulated 180 content of precipitation as a function of the 20-day average simulated air-surface temperature.Continuous lines: regression lines for T < 273 K: δ180 = 0.51T – 149.7, and for T > 273 K:δ18O = 0.157 T – 50.9;Dashed line corresponds to Dansgaard’s observations (1964):δ18O = 0.695 T – 203.4.Some IAEA (1981) observations are also plotted (black circles).

Figure 2

Fig. 3 20-day average simulated D content of precipitation as a function of the 20-day average simulated 18O content of precipitation. Continuous line corresponds to the regression lineδD = 9.6 δ18O + 20.5.Dashed line corresponds to observations (Craig 1961): δD = 8.0 δ18O + 10.