Poster's note : of interest to those attempting to quantify climate
response to strat SRM aerosols (without provoking a baying mob with
experimental work)

http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2012/11/responses-to-volcanoes-in-tree-rings-and-models/?attest=true&wpmp_tp=0

Responses to volcanoes in tree rings and models

November 29th, 2012 by gavinHouston, we have a problem.Admittedly, not a
huge problem and not one that most people, or even most climatologists, are
particularly fascinated by, but one which threads together many topics
(climate models, tree rings, paleo-climate) which have been highlighted
here in the past. The problem is that we have good evidence in the ice core
records for very large tropical eruptions over the last 1000 years – in
particular the eruptions in 1258/1259, 1452 and 1809 to 1815 – but for
which many paleo-reconstructions barely show a blip in temperature. Models,
in attempting to simulate this period, show varied but generally larger
(and sometimes much larger) responses. The differences are significant
enough to have prompted a few people to try and look into why this mismatch
is occurring.Whenever there is a mismatch between model and observation,
there are, roughly speaking, at least three (non-exclusive) possibilities:
the model is wrong, the observational data are wrong or the comparison is
not like-with-like. There have been many examples of resolved mismatches in
each category so all possibilities need to be looked at.As described in
a previous post earlier this year, Mann et al., 2012 (pdf), postulated that
for extreme volcanoes, the cooling would be sufficient to saturate the
growth response, and that some trees might `skip´ a ring for that year
leading to a slight slippage in tree-ring dating, a potential smearing of
the composite chronologies, and a further underestimate of the cooling in
tree-ring based large-scale reconstructions.This hypothesis has now been
challenged by a group of authors in a comment (Anchukaitis et
al.) (pdf, SI, code), who focus on the appropriateness of the tree ring
growth model and the spatial pattern the volcanic climate responses.
The Mann et al. response (pdf, SI) presents some further modeling and 19th
century observational data in support of the original hypothesis.Of course,
there are still two other possibilities to consider. First, the models may
have an excessive response. This could be due to either models responding
excessively to the correct forcing, or could be related to an excessive
forcing itself. There are indeed some important uncertainties in estimating
the history of volcanic forcing – which involves inferring a stratospheric
aerosol load (and effective radius of the particles and their distribution)
from a network of sulphate peaks in ice cores in Greenland and Antarctica.
For example, the forcing for the big eruption around 1453 differs by a
factor of 2 in the inferred forcing (-12 W/m2 and -5.4 W/m2) in the two
estimates proposed for the recent model-intercomparison (Schmidt et al.,
2012). Note too that the details of how aerosols are implemented in any
specific model can also make a difference to the forcing, and there are
many (as yet untested) assumptions built into the forcing
reconstructions.It is also conceivable that climate models overreact to
volcanic forcing – however, excellent matches to the Pinatubo response in
temperature, radiative anomalies, water vapour and dynamic responses, where
we know the volcanic aerosol load well, make that tricky to support (Hansen
et al, 2007) (pdf, SI). (As an aside, the suggestion in this paper that the
response to Krakatoa (1883) was underpredicted by the historical SST fields
was partially vindicated by the results from HadSST3 which showed
substantially more cooling).

The third possibility is that some tree-ring reconstructions can’t be
easily compared to simple temperature averages from the models. As both the
original paper and the comment suggests, there are important effects from
memory from previous years in ring widths and, potentially, increases in
diffuse light post-eruption promoting growth spurts. This needs to be
assessed using more sophisticated forward models for tree ring growth
applied to the models’ output – a feature in both the Mann et al, and
Anchukaitis et al. approaches. More work is likely needed on this, and
using the wider variety of model experiments coming out
of CMIP5/PMIP3.There is clearly potential for these competing hypotheses to
get sorted out. Information from newly-digitised old instrumental records
in the early 19th Century such as shipping records for the East India
Company (Brohan et al, 2012), doesn’t support the largest modelled
responses to Tambora (1815), but does suggest a response larger and more
defined than that seen in some reconstructions. However, other 19th Century
temperature compilations such Berkeley Earth show larger responses to
Tambora – though there are spatial sampling issues there as well. There is
also the potential for non-tree ring based reconstructions to provide
independent confirmation of the magnitude of the response.So while neither
of the latest comments and responses provide a definitive answer to the
principal problem, there is certainly lots of scope for extended and
(hopefully) productive discussions.

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