Using 12 new state-of-the-art climate models, researchers found that ocean warming and sea level rise in the 20th century were substantially reduced by the 1883 eruption of the volcano Krakatoa in Indonesia. Volcanic aerosols block sunlight and caused the ocean surface to cool.
"That cooling penetrated into deeper layers of the ocean where it remained for decades after the event," said Peter Gleckler, an atmospheric scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. "We found that volcanic effects on sea level can persist for many decades."
Gleckler along with colleagues Ben Santer, Karl Taylor and Krishna AchutaRao and collaborators from the National Center for Atmospheric Research, the University of Reading and the Hadley Centre, tested the effects of volcanic eruptions on recent climate models. They examined model simulations of the climate from 1880-2000, comparing them with available observations.
External forcings such as changes in greenhouse gases, solar irradiance, sulphate and volcanic aerosols were included in the models.
Oceans expand and contract depending on the ocean temperature. This causes sea level to increase when the water is warmer and recede in cooler temperatures.
The volume average temperature of oceans (down to 300 meters) worldwide has warmed by roughly .037 degrees Celsius in recent decades due to increasing atmospheric greenhouse gases. While seemingly small, this corresponds to a sea level rise of several centimeters and does not include the effect of other factors such as melting glaciers. However, that sea level jump would have been even greater if it weren't for volcanic eruptions over the last century, Gleckler said.
"The ocean warming suddenly drops," he said. "Volcanoes have a big impact. The ocean warming and sea level would have risen much more if it weren't for volcanoes."
Volcanic aerosols scatter sunlight and cause the ocean surface temperature to cool, an anomaly that is gradually subducted into deeper layers, where it remains for decades.
The experiments studied by Gleckler's team also included the more recent 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines, which was comparable to Krakatoa in terms of its size and intensity. While similar ocean surface cooling resulted from both eruptions, the heat-content recovery occurred much more quickly in the case of Pinatubo.
"The heat content effects of Pinatubo and other eruptions in the late 20th century are offset by the observed warming of the upper ocean, which is primarily due to human influences," Gleckler said.
The research appears in the Feb. 9 issue of the journal Nature.
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Nature