date: Mon Jun 2 14:13:19 2008
from: Phil Jones
subject: RE: Nature Geoscience Review Request - manuscript
to: "Newton, Alicia"
Dear Alicia,
My review of this paper is attached. As you'll be able to gather I think that such
an analysis is speculative, as volcanic events are infrequent so the sample count is
small.
I've made some suggestions that the authors should consider. It will be
difficult to do what I suggest and make it convincing, but I think there
needs to more and extracting the ENSO signal is one way to highlight what's
left. It certainly helped with the paper in Nature in last week's issue.
Best Regards
Phil
At 13:59 23/05/2008, you wrote:
Hi Phil-
Thanks for agreeing to help us with this manuscript. I will send you a link to the
manuscript and instructions for referees in an e-mail to follow shortly.
I would be grateful if you could consider the following questions in your review. Do
you feel that this represents an advance in our understanding of the tropical response
to volcanic forcing? Tropical climate over the past 4 centuries more generally? Does
the record generated fully support the conclusions?
Thanks again for your help. I look forward to reading you comments!
Alicia
___________________________________________________________________________________
From: Phil Jones [[1]mailto:p.jones@uea.ac.uk]
Sent: 23 May 2008 13:50
To: Newton, Alicia
Subject: Re: Nature Geoscience Review Request - manuscript NGS-2008-05-00486
Alicia,
OK. Send the manuscript or details of how to access it.
Cheers
Phil
At 13:26 23/05/2008, you wrote:
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Date: Fri, 23 May 2008 08:26:21 -0400
Message-Id: <92121154558176@rhwww3.nature.com.nature.com>
Dear Professor Jones
As you may have heard, we have recently launched Nature Geoscience, a monthly research
journal (please see our website [2]http://www.nature.com/ngeo for more information).
A short manuscript has been submitted to Nature Geoscience, which we were hoping you
would be interested in reviewing. The manuscript comes from Rosanne D'Arrigo, Rob
Wilson, and Alexander Tudhope and is entitled "Impact of volcanic forcing on tropical
temperatures during the last four centuries". Its first paragraph is pasted below.
Would you be able to assess the novelty and importance of this manuscript for us, within
about 14 days of receiving the paper?
If you are unable to help us with this, can you suggest any alternative referees who
would have an appropriate expertise? I would also be grateful for any thoughts that you
might have regarding other referees who would be appropriate to complement your
expertise on this work.
Thank you in advance for your help and I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Yours sincerely
Alicia Newton
Associate Editor
Nature Geoscience
Nature Publishing Group
The Macmillan Building
4 Crinan Street
London N1 9XW
UK
+44 20 7833 4000
Impact of volcanic forcing on tropical temperatures during the last four centuries
Rosanne D'Arrigo, Rob Wilson, and Alexander Tudhope
Knowledge of volcanism's impact on tropical climate is limited prior to the instrumental
period, yet important for understanding climate variability. Here we combine 19 coral,
tree-ring and ice core proxies into an annual composite record that provides a
comprehensive view of volcanism's impact on tropical sea surface temperatures (SSTs)
during recent centuries. We find an association between tropical volcanism and cold
reconstructed tropical temperatures, although the cooling is spatially variable across
the tropics. Only minimal cooling is observed following extratropical eruptions. Severe
conditions following the (likely tropical) unknown1 and Tambora, Indonesia eruptions of
the early 1800s suggest that this was the coldest sustained period of the Little Ice Age
in the tropics. By contrast, the tropical impact of the 1600 Huaynaputina, Peru event2
appears much weaker than at higher latitudes, but the number of tropical proxies at this
time is low. Our
results have implications for how the tropical ocean-atmosphere system responds to
natural and anthropogenic radiative forcing.
Please note that your contact details are being held on our editorial database which is
used only for this journal's management of the peer review process. If you would prefer
us not to contact you in the future please let us know by emailing
geoscience@nature.com.
This email has been sent through the NPG Manuscript Tracking System NY-610A-NPG&MTS
Prof. Phil Jones
Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090
School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784
University of East Anglia
Norwich Email p.jones@uea.ac.uk
NR4 7TJ
UK
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Prof. Phil Jones
Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090
School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784
University of East Anglia
Norwich Email p.jones@uea.ac.uk
NR4 7TJ
UK
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