Gulf of Maine cooled for 900 years then started warming

"The Gulf of Maine has naturally been cooling for the last 1,000 years, and now the reverse is happening," Alan Wanamaker says. "It took 900 years to cool 2 degrees Celsius and 100 years to warm 2 degrees Celsius." (Credit: Hans Grobbes/AWI via Wikimedia Commons)

By combining seawater data from clam shells and thousands of climate simulations, researchers find that 900 years of cooling in the Gulf of Maine suddenly reversed in the late 1800s.

Why did that happen?

The “recent, rapid ocean warming” was “likely due to increased atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations and changes in western North Atlantic circulation,” the researchers write in a paper in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

Will that keep happening?

The researchers also wrote that because of projected increases in greenhouse gas concentrations, plus projected weakening of the ocean currents that continually mix warm surface water and cooler, deeper water, “this warming trend in the Gulf of Maine is likely to continue, leading to continued and potentially worsening ecologically and economically devastating temperature increases in the region in the future.”

Nina Whitney, who earned a doctoral degree at Iowa State University in 2020 and is now a research assistant professor at Western Washington University, is the paper’s corresponding author. Alan Wanamaker, an Iowa State professor of geological and atmospheric sciences, is a coauthor.

“The Gulf of Maine has naturally been cooling for the last 1,000 years, and now the reverse is happening,” Wanamaker says. “It took 900 years to cool 2 degrees Celsius and 100 years to warm 2 degrees Celsius.”

The research team traces the change back to the spread of industrialization, writing that cooling caused by the ash and gases produced by volcanic activity and ocean dynamics quickly reversed as machines, manufacturing, and industry developed in the 1800s.

Wanamaker has been studying the Gulf of Maine ever since his doctoral studies at the University of Maine some 20 years ago. His field is paleoclimatology; he studies the variations and trends of past climates to understand what will influence future climates.

But, for most of the planet’s history, there were no instruments recording ocean temperature, circulation patterns, and other vital signs. It wasn’t until 1905, for example, when the first sea surface temperature sensors were dropped in the Gulf of Maine’s Boothbay Harbor.

So how can researchers know what happened in the Gulf of Maine before 1905?

Wanamaker and his research group have developed a marine history for the Gulf of Maine by collecting geochemical information from the shells of Arctica islandica, the stuff of clam chowder. The shells are useful as a proxy for instrument data because they’re long-lived and create annual shell increments that reliably record environmental data. Oxygen isotopes from the shell layers, for example, can be correlated to seawater temperature. Nitrogen and radiocarbon measurements can provide information about ocean currents and the source of the water they feed into the Gulf of Maine.

By measuring, recording, and cross-dating information from 34 shells, Wanamaker’s group was able to characterize Gulf of Maine water from 1761 to 2013. The group also validated its data by comparing shell data with data collected by instruments over the past 117 years. The researchers found general agreement between the data sets—warming at the rate of nearly 4 degrees Fahrenheit per century.

The researchers ran 10,000 climate model simulations and used the historical clam-shell data to corroborate the results. They also changed individual variables in some of the simulations, including greenhouse gas emissions, land use changes, and volcanic eruptions.

Their conclusion?

“It is clear that the mid- to late-1800s were a time of dramatic change in the North Atlantic, as documented both in the Gulf of Maine geochemical records presented and discussed in this study, as well as other records of temperature and ocean circulation changes throughout the North Atlantic,” the researchers write.

The models say greenhouse gas emissions have been a major driver of warming in the Gulf of Maine. The researchers say weakening of ocean circulation (the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation), possibly because of greenhouse gas emissions, has also changed the source water entering the Gulf of Maine, with more “Warm Slope Water” originating near the Gulf Stream that carries water from the Gulf of Mexico into the Atlantic and up the East Coast of the US, and less from northern sources, including the Labrador Sea.

Wanamaker is also coauthor of a separate study in Nature Geoscience also combines natural proxy data (in this case, rain and climate data taken from cave stalagmites in Portugal) with climate simulations. That study found climate changes since industrialization—specifically, there has been unprecedented expansion of a ridge of atmospheric high pressure (called the Azores High), creating unusually dry conditions across western Europe.

“There is a human fingerprint in both instances,” Wanamaker says.

And, according to both studies, “The real bad news is that our trajectory is not looking fantastic,” Wanamaker says. “The expansion of the Azores High is likely to continue. And the warming of the Gulf of Maine is likely to continue.”

The National Science Foundation provided partial support for the Gulf of Maine and the Azores High projects.

Source: Iowa State University