oceans and climate

Dating an ancient episode of severe global warming

Nordenskiöldfjellet sampling location (the distant hillside) beyond Longyear Glacier, Spitsbergen

Using sophisticated methods of dating rocks, a team including University of Southampton researchers based at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, have pinned down the timing of the start of an episode of an ancient global warming known as the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM), with implications for the triggering mechanism.

Observing Arctic ice-edge plankton blooms from space

False-colour satellite image of ice-edge phytoplankton blooms

Ongoing climate-driven changes to the Arctic sea-ice could have a significant impact on the blooming of tiny planktonic plants (phytoplankton) with important implications for the Arctic ecosystem, according to new research conducted by scientists at the UK’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC).

Arctic environment during an ancient bout of natural global warming

Fieldwork in Spitsbergen

Scientists are unravelling the environmental changes that took place around the Arctic during an exceptional episode of ancient global warming. Newly published results from a high-resolution study of sediments collected on Spitsbergen represent a significant contribution to this endeavour.

International consortium to study impacts of iron fertilisation

Natural iron fertilisation artound the Crozet Islands.southern Indian Ocean

Scientists at the UK’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC) will participate in an international effort to assess the efficacy of ocean iron fertilisation (OIF) in reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere, as well as its potential impacts on marine ecosystems.

Arctic climate variation under ancient greenhouse conditions

The Cretaceous diatom Stephanopyxis

Tiny organisms preserved in marine sediments hold clues about Arctic climate variation during an ancient episode of greenhouse warming.

Dr Heiko Pälike awarded the 2011 Wollaston Fund by the Geological Society, London

Dr Heiko Pälike

Dr Heiko Pälike of the University of Southampton’s School of Ocean and Earth Science (SOES) based at National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, has been awarded the prestigious Wollaston Fund, presented by the Geological Society, London, the Learned and Professional Society for Geoscientists in the UK.

Sea-level researchers win major funding

A major Southampton-led consortium project to study past and possible future sea-level rise has received a major grant award of £3.3 million over five years from the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).

Efficient phosphorus use by phytoplankton

NOC Southampton

Rapid turnover and remodelling of lipid membranes could help phytoplankton cope with nutrient scarcity in the open ocean.

Measuring air-sea exchange of carbon dioxide in the open ocean

The exchange of gases between the oceans and the atmosphere has an important influence on climate

A team led by scientists at the National Oceanography Centre have measured the air-sea exchange of carbon dioxide in the open ocean at higher wind speed then anyone else has ever managed. Their findings are important for understanding how interactions between the oceans and the atmosphere influence climate.

NOC scientists contribute to Cambridge climate workshops

Ice

Dr Kevin Horsburgh and Prof. John Huthnance of the National Oceanography Centre (NOC) are among the organizers of an ongoing programme of workshops and conferences being held at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences (INI) in Cambridge entitled ‘Mathematical and Statistical Approaches to Climate Modelling and Prediction’ (11 August – 22 December 2010).

d96b37e25c18f40a