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Early-twentieth-century cold bias in ocean surface temperature observations

Sebastian Sippel, Elizabeth C. Kent, Nicolai Meinshausen, Duo Chan, Christopher Kadow, Raphael Neukom, Erich Fischer, Vincent Humphrey, Robert Rohde, Iris de Vries, Reto Knutti

2024Nature17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The observed temperature record, which combines sea surface temperatures with near-surface air temperatures over land, is crucial for understanding climate variability and change 1–4 . However, early records of global mean surface temperature are uncertain owing to changes in measurement technology and practice, partial documentation 5–8 , and incomplete spatial coverage 9 . Here we show that existing estimates of ocean temperatures in the early twentieth century (1900–1930) are too cold, based on independent statistical reconstructions of the global mean surface temperature from either ocean or land data. The ocean-based reconstruction is on average about 0.26 °C colder than the land-based one, despite very high agreement in all other periods. The ocean cold anomaly is unforced, and internal variability in climate models cannot explain the observed land–ocean discrepancy. Several lines of evidence based on attribution, timescale analysis, coastal grid cells and palaeoclimate data support the argument of a substantial cold bias in the observed global sea-surface-temperature record in the early twentieth century. Although estimates of global warming since the mid-nineteenth century are not affected, correcting the ocean cold bias would result in a more modest early-twentieth-century warming trend 10 , a lower estimate of decadal-scale variability inferred from the instrumental record 3 , and better agreement between simulated and observed warming than existing datasets suggest 2 .

Topics & Concepts

Sea surface temperatureClimatologyAnomaly (physics)Climate changeTemperature recordEnvironmental scienceGlobal warmingGeologyOceanographyPhysicsCondensed matter physicsClimate variability and modelsGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchTree-ring climate responses
Early-twentieth-century cold bias in ocean surface temperature observations | Litcius