Analyses of proxy based reconstructions of surface temperatures during the past 330 years show the existence of a distinct
oscillatory mode of variability with an approximate time scale of 70 years. This variability is also seen in instrumental
records, although the oscillatory nature of the variability is difficult to assess due to the short length of the instrumental
record. The spatial pattern of this variability is hemispheric or perhaps even global in scale, but with particular emphasis
on the Atlantic region. Independent analyses of multicentury integrations of two versions of the GFDL coupled atmosphere-ocean
model also show the existence of distinct multidecadal variability in the North Atlantic region which resembles the observed
pattern. The model variability involves fluctuations in the intensity of the thermohaline circulation in the North Atlantic.
It is our intent here to provide a direct comparison of the observed variability to that simulated in a coupled ocean-atmosphere
model, making use of both existing instrumental analyses and newly available proxy based multi-century surface temperature
estimates. The analyses demonstrate a substantial agreement between the simulated and observed patterns of multidecadal variability
in sea surface temperature (SST) over the North Atlantic. There is much less agreement between the model and observations
for sea level pressure. Seasonal analyses of the variability demonstrate that for both the model and observations SST appears
to be the primary carrier of the multidecadal signal.
Received: 8 June 1999 / Accepted: 11 February 2000