Nature, 21 January 2026
New evidence confirms that the powerful North Atlantic system of ocean currents known as the AMOC (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation) kept running during the last Ice Age, despite extreme cold and extensive ice cover. Today’s models accurately predicted this past behavior, which strengthens indications these models also are on the right track in projecting the AMOC’s future. Fossil data from the North Atlantic found that deep water critical for sustaining these major currents was only 1.8°C colder than today and flowed at sufficient depths during the Ice Age, demonstrating key components of healthy circulation. Chemical tracers similarly linked these deep waters to warm, salty surface waters from the subtropics and Nordic seas, confirming large-scale circulation rather than a weakened or shut-down system. These observations match the findings of current climate models, strengthening their credibility and lending credence also to future predictions by these models: that continued fossil fuel emissions and resulting warming will weaken these currents in the future, significantly cooling Europe and North Africa and disrupting global weather patterns.
Nature Communications, 1 April 2026 A growing network of meltwater lakes along the edge of…
Nature Communications, 6 April 2026 Arctic warming increases the amount of iron draining out of…
Nature Climate Change, 30 March 2026 Rising temperatures increase the frequency of retrogressive thaw slumps…
Nature Communications, 30 March 2026 Surface melting in Antarctica is projected to increase this century,…
Permafrost is a critical component of the global climate system because its thaw releases vast…
Communications Earth & Environment, 27 March 2026 The potential collapse of the major system of…