Vol.8, N°1 March 2000
A Joint Newsletter of the Past Global Changes Project (PAGES) and the Climate Variability and Predictability Project (CLIVAR)
Vol.5, N°1 No. 15
Exchanges
ENSO at the intersection of PAGES and CLIVAR
Contents
The oxygen isotope record from a modern coral located off the north coast of Papua New Guinea (see Cane et al., page 3). As visible in the underlying schematic of warm phase climate anomaly patterns during Northern Hemisphere winter, this region of the far western equatorial Pacific experiences relative drought and lowered sea surface temperatures (SSTs) during the El Niño phase of the Southern Oscillation. These climatic factors are recorded in the oxygen isotopic composition of the skeletons of corals growing in nearby reefs, with isotopically heavy skeleton (less negative δ18O) deposited during the dry and cool El Niño events.
Editorial
2
Climate Paradigms for the Last Millenium
2
ENSO through the Holocene
3
Abrupt Climate Change
7
Regional Hydrological Change
10
North Atlantic Variability
13
PAGES section: Reconstructing Climatic Variability from Historical Sources
17
and Other Proxy Records; PMIP Report; Addenda to NL 99–3; Past Global Changes and their Significance for the Future
CLIVAR section: Changes in the CLIVAR SSG; First International Conference
21
on the Ocean Observing System for Climate; Science Highlights from the Monsoon Symposium and CLIVAR Monsoon Panel Meeting; News from the TAO Implementation Panel
Calendars
ISSN 1563–0803
24 PAGES International Project Office, Bärenplatz 2, CH–3011 Bern, Switzerland Tel: +41–31–3123133, Fax: +41–31–3123168, pages@pages.unibe.ch, www.pages@unibe.ch
International CLIVAR Project Office, Southampton Oceanography Centre, Empress Dock, Southhampton SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom Tel: +44–23 80 596777, Fax: +44–23 80 596204, icpo@soc.soton.ac.uk, www.dkrz.de/clivar/hp.html
ISSN 1026–0471