♣Jouranl
of geophysical research: Oceans♣
1.
Northern North Atlantic sea-surface
height and ocean heat content
Sirpa Häkkinen, Peter B. Rhines and
Denise L. Worthen
DOI
10.1002/jgrc.20268
2. The relationship between oxygen, nitrate and
phosphate in the world ocean based on potential temperature
Miho Ishizu and
Kelvin J. Richards
DOI 10.1002/jgrc.20249
♣GRL♣
3. Do Extreme Climate Events Require Extreme Forcings?
Arun Kumar,
Mingyue Chen, Martin Hoerling, Jon Eischeid
doi: 10.1002/grl.50657
4. Impact of City
Size on Precipitation-Modifying Potential
Paul E. Schmid and Dev Niyogi
doi: 10.1002/grl.50656
5. GRACE Satellites Monitor Large
Depletion in Water Storage in Response to the 2011 Drought in Texas
Di Long, Bridget R. Scanlon, Laurent
Longuevergne, Alex-Y. Sun, D. Nelun Fernando, and Save Himanshu
doi: 10.1002/grl.50655
Keywords: Drought monitoring, GRACE, soil moisture storage,
groundwater storage, NLDAS, GLDAS, Texas
6. Strong relationship
between dimethyl sulfide and net community production in the western subarctic
Pacific
Sohiko Kameyama, Hiroshi Tanimoto,
Satoshi Inomata, Hisayuki Yoshikawa-Inoue, Urumu Tsunogai, Atsushi Tsuda,
Mitsuo Uematsu, Masao Ishii, and Daisuke Sasano, Koji Suzuki, and Yuichi Nosaka
doi: 10.1002/grl.50654
7. Linked frequency and intensity of persistent
volcanic activity at Stromboli (Italy)
J. Taddeucci, D.M. Palladino, G. Sottili, D. Bernini, D. Andronico, A. Cristaldi
doi: 10.1002/grl.50652
1) Tracking frequency and relative
intensity of Strombolian explosions at Stromboli
2) Frequency and intensity correlate
positively when time-averaged over hours-days
3) Rising input of magma/gas at depth
raises both explosion frequency and intensity
8. Effect of CO2 inhibition on biogenic isoprene
emission: implications for air quality under 2000-to-2050 changes in climate,
vegetation and land use
Amos P. K. Tai, Loretta J. Mickley,
Colette L. Heald, Shiliang Wu
doi: 10.1002/grl.50650
• Effect of CO2-isoprene interaction on air quality by
year 2050 is simulated
• CO2-isoprene interaction reduces ozone and aerosol
sensitivity to climate
• Human land use change will become a key driver for
future air quality
9. Improved Annular Mode Variability in a Global
Atmospheric General Circulation Model with 16-km Horizontal Resolution
Erool Palipane,
Jian Lu, Gang
Chen, James L. Kinter III
doi:
10.1002/grl.50649
10.Characterizing
decadal to centennial variability in the equatorial Pacific during the last
millennium
T. R. Ault,
C. Deser,
M. Newman, J. Emile-Geay
doi: 10.1002/grl.50647
11. Identification of a widespread
Kamchatkan tephra: a middle Pleistocene tie-point between
Arctic and Pacific paleoclimatic records
Vera Ponomareva, Maxim Portnyagin,
Alexander Derkachev, Olaf Juschus, Dieter Garbe-Schönberg, and Dirk Nürnberg
doi: 10.1002/grl.50645
♣Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems♣
12. Ten Years of soil CO2 continuous monitoring on Mt.
Etna: exploring the relationship between processes of soil degassing and
volcanic activity
Marco Liuzzo,
Sergio Gurrieri, Gaetano Giudice, Giovanni Giuffrida
DOI 10.1002/ggge.20196
Key Points:Clear relationship between anomalous soil CO2 degassing
and volcanic activity Cycles of CO2 increase-decrease always anticipated the
eruptive activity
Brief lava fountaining episodes were preceded by minor
increase-decrease cycles
13. A skeletal Sr/Ca record preserved in Dipsastraea (Favia) speciosa and implications for coral Sr/Ca
thermometry in mid-latitude regions
Inah Seo, Yong Il Lee, Tsuyoshi
Watanabe, Hiroya Yamano, Michiyo Shimamura, Chan Min Yoo and Kiseong Hyeong
DOI 10.1002/ggge.20195
♣Global biogeochemical cycles♣
14. Future
Arctic Ocean Primary Productivity from
CMIP5 Simulations: Uncertain Outcome, but
Consistent Mechanisms
Martin Vancoppenolle, Laurent Bopp, Gurvan Madec, John
Dunne, Tatiana Ilyina, Paul R. Halloran, Nadja Steiner
♣Climate of the past♣
15. Contrasting patterns of climatic changes during
the Holocene across the Italian Peninsula reconstructed from pollen data
O. Peyron , M. Magny , S.
Goring , S. Joannin , J.-L. de Beaulieu , E. Brugiapaglia , L. Sadori , G.
Garfi ,
K. Kouli, C. Ioakim, and N.
Combourieu-Nebout
doi:10.5194/cp-9-1233-2013
16. Greenland ice core evidence of the 79 AD
Vesuvius eruption
C. Barbante, N. M. Kehrwald, P.
Marianelli, B. M. Vinther, J. P. Steffensen, G. Cozzi, C. U. Hammer,
H. B. Clausen, and M.-L.
Siggaard-Adersen
doi:10.5194/cp-9-1221-2013
They identify tephra par- ticles and determine that
volcanic shards extracted from a depth of 429.3 m in the GRIP ice core are likely
due to the 79 AD Vesuvius eruption. The chemical composition of the tephra
particles is consistent with the K-phonolitic compo- sition of the Vesuvius
juvenile ejecta and differs from the chemical composition of other major
eruptions (≥VEI 4) between 50–100 AD.
17. Vegetation responses to interglacial warming in the
Arctic: examples from Lake El’gygytgyn, Far East Russian Arctic
A.
V. Lozhkin and P. M. Anderson
doi:10.5194/cp-9-1211-2013