Rethinking Palaeoclimatology for Society
Lead Research Organisation:
Royal Holloway, Univ of London
Department Name: Geography
Abstract
There is a recognised gap in the communication of information generated by climate scientists and evidence needed by policy makers, in part because influencing policy through research is complex and requires skills that might not be valued or common in research systems. The current situation of our Earth's system, together with the social movements for climate justice, urge a step change in how policy and scientists approach Climate Change. Through this fellowship, I will develop new routes for impact in palaeoclimatology and will lead a vital step change in my field of research.
Annual to decadal climate predictions may offer important information to Climate Services and Environmental Agencies, which would help guide short- and medium-term climate change strategies. For example, a better knowledge of the frequency and magnitude of floods in the UK. Decadal climate predictions are skilful for surface temperature, but confidence in projections of atmospheric pattern and the associated ecosystem response are less robust. This is, in part, because the amplitude of the decadal climate response is difficult to verify by the available instrumental data (reanalyses), which only goes back a century or two, and the impact of superimposed low-frequency variability might not be well represented. One way to provide more information on the decadal climate response is to include high-temporal resolution palaeoclimate timeseries in reanalyses. So far, the availability of proxy data suitable for this purpose is limited by the nature of the data (qualitative vs quantitative), chronological constrains (dating uncertainty and time-resolution of the proxy records) and geographical location of the proxy records (i.e limited to specific climate regions as ice-cores and corals), hence the study of decadal climate variability in the past is still in its infancy. In order to make developments in this field, I will lead an international research team that integrates palaeoclimatologists and climate modellers. We will combine emerging methodological approaches in proxy developments, chronological constraints, statistical tools and data-model comparison to provide advanced information of past decadal climate variability in the North Atlantic-European region such as shifting atmospheric circulation and occurrence of extreme weather events; and we will develop emergent constraints based on past climate scenarios to be applied to decadal prediction systems.
Beyond the scientific goals, the fellowship aims at a better integration of palaeo evidence into climate policy to create a step change in how long-term climate data are viewed and used by policy and stakeholders. We will create a network of policy advisers, policy makers and other end users willing to engage. A co-development model of research will be adopted to develop shared understanding to design the research outputs, and ensure the research contributes to the specific and current needs of the decision makers across various sectors. The ultimate challenge is to create a leading centre for Palaeo Evidence for Policy at Royal Holloway University of London to: (1) build a palaeo-climate service feeding policy makers with evidence to assist decision-making; (2) support palaeoclimatologists in the UK and overseas to make impact cases studies; (3) train the next generation of early career researchers in policy skills.
The fellowship will also explore art-based methods for impact. In particular, creative writing to promote climate science literacy for young children.
Annual to decadal climate predictions may offer important information to Climate Services and Environmental Agencies, which would help guide short- and medium-term climate change strategies. For example, a better knowledge of the frequency and magnitude of floods in the UK. Decadal climate predictions are skilful for surface temperature, but confidence in projections of atmospheric pattern and the associated ecosystem response are less robust. This is, in part, because the amplitude of the decadal climate response is difficult to verify by the available instrumental data (reanalyses), which only goes back a century or two, and the impact of superimposed low-frequency variability might not be well represented. One way to provide more information on the decadal climate response is to include high-temporal resolution palaeoclimate timeseries in reanalyses. So far, the availability of proxy data suitable for this purpose is limited by the nature of the data (qualitative vs quantitative), chronological constrains (dating uncertainty and time-resolution of the proxy records) and geographical location of the proxy records (i.e limited to specific climate regions as ice-cores and corals), hence the study of decadal climate variability in the past is still in its infancy. In order to make developments in this field, I will lead an international research team that integrates palaeoclimatologists and climate modellers. We will combine emerging methodological approaches in proxy developments, chronological constraints, statistical tools and data-model comparison to provide advanced information of past decadal climate variability in the North Atlantic-European region such as shifting atmospheric circulation and occurrence of extreme weather events; and we will develop emergent constraints based on past climate scenarios to be applied to decadal prediction systems.
Beyond the scientific goals, the fellowship aims at a better integration of palaeo evidence into climate policy to create a step change in how long-term climate data are viewed and used by policy and stakeholders. We will create a network of policy advisers, policy makers and other end users willing to engage. A co-development model of research will be adopted to develop shared understanding to design the research outputs, and ensure the research contributes to the specific and current needs of the decision makers across various sectors. The ultimate challenge is to create a leading centre for Palaeo Evidence for Policy at Royal Holloway University of London to: (1) build a palaeo-climate service feeding policy makers with evidence to assist decision-making; (2) support palaeoclimatologists in the UK and overseas to make impact cases studies; (3) train the next generation of early career researchers in policy skills.
The fellowship will also explore art-based methods for impact. In particular, creative writing to promote climate science literacy for young children.
Organisations
- Royal Holloway, Univ of London (Lead Research Organisation)
- Dept for Sci, Innovation & Tech (DSIT) (Project Partner)
- Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA (Project Partner)
- MET OFFICE (Project Partner)
- The Royal Society of London (Project Partner)
- World Meteorological Organisation (Project Partner)
- Geological Survey of Finland (Project Partner)
- GFZ German Research (Project Partner)
Publications

Hernández A
(2023)
The timing of the deglaciation in the Atlantic Iberian mountains: Insights from the stratigraphic analysis of a lake sequence in Serra da Estrela (Portugal)
in Earth Surface Processes and Landforms

Lenton TM
(2024)
Remotely sensing potential climate change tipping points across scales.
in Nature communications

Martin-Puertas C
(2023)
Dampened predictable decadal North Atlantic climate fluctuations due to ice melting
in Nature Geoscience

Wunderling N
(2024)
Climate tipping point interactions and cascades: a review
in Earth System Dynamics
Title | Varve thickness record of Diss Mere (UK) |
Description | The sedimentary record of Diss Mere, a lake in the UK, is 15 m long. Annul laminations (varves) are preserved between 9 and 13 m of sediment depth covering most of the Holocene from ca. 2100 to 10,300 cal BP. Varves consist of a pale lamina made of authigenic calcite crystals deposited in summer, and a dark lamina composed of, primarily, crysophyceae cyst, planktonic centric diatoms, filaments of organic matter and micrite, which represents lake sedimentation during autumn - winter. This dataset contains the varve (annual) thickness record and thickness of the seasonal layers. Data were collected in 2018-2019 and covers a time interval from 2069 to 10290 cal. a BP. Data are at annual resolution. Detailed microfacies analysis, varve counting, and varve thickness measurements were performed on the petrographic thin sections using a Leica (M205C) stereo-zoom petrological microscope with plane- and cross-polarised light, at 80x. Varve counting and varve thickness measurements were performed for each seasonal layer along the ca 4.2 m long sequence of varved sediments. |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | not aware of any impact |
URL | https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.944411 |
Description | Climate policy workshop |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Annual meeting with policymakers and employees at climate services including DESNZ, Defra, the Met Office and the World Meteorological Organisation to present our research outputs and exchange knowledge about research priorities, and they are engaged with our research and reported increased interest in our expertise |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024 |
Description | Newsletter |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | We send a newsletter twice a year to our partners and end users of our research. This involves national policy makers and national and international climate services such as the Met Office and the World Meteorological Organisation |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024 |
URL | https://www.palaeodecadal.org/publications |
Description | Publication of an illustrated children book |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Publication of an illustrated children book on the topic investigated in the project. The presentation of the book was in an international conference and on X (twitter). Free copies of the book were available. The book can be purchase on Amazon |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://www.amazon.co.uk/If-lakes-could-tell-stories/dp/B0CB2FTQDW |