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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. Hunter is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. Hunter.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2013

On the identification of a Pliocene time slice for data–model comparison

Alan M. Haywood; Aisling M. Dolan; Steven J. Pickering; Harry J. Dowsett; Erin L. McClymont; Caroline L. Prescott; Ulrich Salzmann; Daniel J. Hill; Stephen J. Hunter; Daniel J. Lunt; James O. Pope; Paul J. Valdes

The characteristics of the mid-Pliocene warm period (mPWP: 3.264–3.025 Ma BP) have been examined using geological proxies and climate models. While there is agreement between models and data, details of regional climate differ. Uncertainties in prescribed forcings and in proxy data limit the utility of the interval to understand the dynamics of a warmer than present climate or evaluate models. This uncertainty comes, in part, from the reconstruction of a time slab rather than a time slice, where forcings required by climate models can be more adequately constrained. Here, we describe the rationale and approach for identifying a time slice(s) for Pliocene environmental reconstruction. A time slice centred on 3.205 Ma BP (3.204–3.207 Ma BP) has been identified as a priority for investigation. It is a warm interval characterized by a negative benthic oxygen isotope excursion (0.21–0.23‰) centred on marine isotope stage KM5c (KM5.3). It occurred during a period of orbital forcing that was very similar to present day. Climate model simulations indicate that proxy temperature estimates are unlikely to be significantly affected by orbital forcing for at least a precession cycle centred on the time slice, with the North Atlantic potentially being an important exception.


Developments in Earth and Environmental Sciences | 2008

Middle Miocene to Pliocene History of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean

Alan M. Haywood; John L. Smellie; Allan C. Ashworth; David J. Cantrill; Fabio Florindo; M. Hambrey; David J. T. Hill; Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand; Stephen J. Hunter; Robert D Larter; C.H. Lear; S. Passchier; R. S. W. van de Wal

This chapter explores the Middle Miocene to Pliocene terrestrial and marine records of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. The structure of the chapter makes a clear distinction between terrestrial and marine records as well as proximal (on or around Antarctica) and more distal records (Southern Ocean). Particular geographical regions are identified that reflect the areas for which the majority of palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic information exist. Specifically, the chapter addresses the terrestrial sedimentary and fjordal environments of the Transantarctic Mountains and Lambert Glacier region, the terrestrial fossil record of Antarctic climate, terrestrial environments of West Antarctica, and the marine records of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS), the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) and the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet (APIS), as well as the marine record of the Southern Ocean. Previous and current studies focusing on modelling Middle Miocene to Pliocene climate, environments and ice sheets are discussed.


European Physical Journal E | 2014

Non-Fickian diffusion and the accumulation of methane bubbles in deep-water sediments

Dennis S. Goldobin; Nikolai V. Brilliantov; J. Levesley; Mike Lovell; Christopher A. Rochelle; Peter Jackson; Alan M. Haywood; Stephen J. Hunter; John Rees

In the absence of fractures, methane bubbles in deep-water sediments can be immovably trapped within a porous matrix by surface tension. The dominant mechanism of transfer of gas mass therefore becomes the diffusion of gas molecules through porewater. The accurate description of this process requires non-Fickian diffusion to be accounted for, including both thermal diffusion and gravitational action. We evaluate the diffusive flux of aqueous methane considering non-Fickian diffusion and predict the existence of extensive bubble mass accumulation zones within deep-water sediments. The limitation on the hydrate deposit capacity is revealed; too weak deposits cannot reach the base of the hydrate stability zone and form any bubbly horizon.Graphical abstract


Geology | 2012

Tracking the relict bases of marine methane hydrates using their intersections with stratigraphic reflections

Richard J. Davies; Kate E. Thatcher; Howard A. Armstrong; Jinxiu Yang; Stephen J. Hunter

We describe a three-dimensional seismic interpretation approach for identifying the past bases of the methane hydrate stability zone in marine settings. The bases commonly crosscut stratigraphic reflections, and these lines of intersection can be revealed by maps of seismic amplitude. Maps for four reflections that are crosscut by the base of the present-day offshore Mauritania methane hydrate reveal extraordinary curvilinear changes of amplitude that are parallel to one another and extend for as much as ∼20 km. They are interpreted as marking the relict intersections of the bases of the hydrate stability zone, and formed by its upward resetting. We hypothesize that this was caused by pulsed sedimentation during repeated glacial-interglacial cycles over the past ∼1.25 m.y. Localized deflections in the lines of intersection are indicative of local changes in sediment temperature. This technique could provide a wealth of information on local and regional changes in ambient conditions and better estimates of the volumes of methane being released through time. It therefore should help test for interdependencies between hydrate dissociation and climate change.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

The transient response of ice volume to orbital forcing during the warm Late Pliocene

Bas de Boer; Alan M. Haywood; Aisling M. Dolan; Stephen J. Hunter; Caroline L. Prescott

Examining the nature of ice sheet and sea level response to past episodes of enhanced greenhouse gas forcing may help constrain future sea level change. Here, for the first time, we present the transient nature of ice sheets and sea level during the late Pliocene. The transient ice sheet predictions are forced by multiple climate snapshots derived from a climate model set up with late Pliocene boundary conditions, forced with different orbital forcing scenarios appropriate to two Marine Isotope Stages (MISs), MIS KM5c, and K1. Our results indicate that during MIS KM5c both the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets contributed to sea level rise relative to present and were relatively stable. Insolation forcing between the hemispheres was out of phase during MIS K1 and led to an asynchronous response of ice volume globally. Therefore, when variations of precession were high, inferring the behavior of ice sheets from benthic isotope or sea level records is complex.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011

A Tortonian (Late Miocene, 11.61–7.25 Ma) global vegetation reconstruction

Matthew J. Pound; Alan M. Haywood; Ulrich Salzmann; James B. Riding; Daniel J. Lunt; Stephen J. Hunter


Nature Geoscience | 2011

A model for orbital pacing of methane hydrate destabilization during the Palaeogene

Daniel J. Lunt; Andy Ridgwell; Appy Sluijs; James C. Zachos; Stephen J. Hunter; Alan M. Haywood


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011

Sensitivity of Pliocene ice sheets to orbital forcing

Aisling M. Dolan; Alan M. Haywood; Daniel J. Hill; Harry J. Dowsett; Stephen J. Hunter; Daniel J. Lunt; Steven J. Pickering


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2013

Sensitivity of the global submarine hydrate inventory to scenarios of future climate change

Stephen J. Hunter; Denis S. Goldobin; Alan M. Haywood; Andy Ridgwell; John Rees


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014

Assessing orbitally-forced interglacial climate variability during the mid-Pliocene Warm Period

Caroline L. Prescott; Alan M. Haywood; Aisling M. Dolan; Stephen J. Hunter; James O. Pope; Steven J. Pickering

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Harry J. Dowsett

United States Geological Survey

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Bette L. Otto-Bliesner

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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