IMAGE HEADER == Overview == This page describes the experimental protocol for the ISMIP6 2300 projections that focus on simulations of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) extended to year 2300. These simulations are based on CMIP5 and CMIP6 climate model outputs, and are a follow-on to the simulations to 2100 described in [ISMIP6-Projections-Antarctica] and the papers by [https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/14/2331/2020/ Nowicki et al. (2020)] and [https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/14/3033/2020/ Seroussi et al. (2020)]. Some experiments use climate forcing from coupled global models that were run until 2300 under CMIP forcing scenarios, while other experiments use repeated forcing from the 2080-2100 period, sampled randomly between 2100 and 2300. The deadline to submit results is September 1st, 2022. == List of Projections == Two CMIP5 models (CCSM4 and !HadGEM2) and two CMIP6 models (CESM2 and UKESM) were run with extended high CO2 forcing to 2300 (RCP8.5 and ssp5-85, respectively, for CMIP5 and CMIP6) and were selected for long-term projections. No !NorESM1-M extension to 2300 is available, so the extended experiments with !NorESM forcing use repeat forcing only. There are 14 experiments in all. Each experiment ID begins with the prefix 'AE' to signify 'Antarctic extension'. Table 1 lists six ''Tier 1'' experiments that we ask each group to run if possible. This selection includes one run for each of the four climate models with extended forcing to 2300; a low-forcing run for comparison to the high-forcing runs; and one run with repeat forcing from the late 21st century forcing for comparison to runs with extended forcing. If a group is unable to run all six Tier 1 experiments, we ask that they choose a subset. Table 2 lists an additional eight ''Tier 2'' experiments that we encourage each group to run if resources allow. These include three more experiments with repeat late 21st century forcing, for comparison to the runs with extended forcing. There is one experiment with low emissions (ssp1-26) extended to 2300, to complement the RCP2.6 experiment in Tier 1. Finally, there are four experiments with prescribed ice-shelf collapse driven by hydrofracture, to compare to the runs without shelf collapse. We excluded shelf-collapse runs from Tier 1 because not all ice sheet models might have this capability. Modeling groups that can run many simulations are encouraged to further explore the ice sheet response using ''targeted experiments''. For these experiments, groups should repeat the runs in Tables 1 and 2 with ''either'' atmospheric or ocean forcing enabled, but not both. This will help us analyze the relative contributions of atmospheric and ocean forcing, especially for the runs with more extreme warming. The experiment numbers are as in Tables 1 and 2, but with a lower-case 'a' or 'o' appended to show which forcing is applied. For the original ISMIP6 projections, each group was asked to run with a ''standard'' sub-shelf melting parameterization based on the method described by [https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/14/3111/2020/ Jourdain et al. (2020)], and optionally an ''open'' parameterization chosen by the group. For the extended Antarctic projections, we no longer prescribe a standard method. Instead, sub-shelf melting schemes are left to the discretion of each group. This change reflects our desire to fully sample the methods in use. As in the original projections, we ask each group to use the thermal forcing data provided by ISMIP6, so that different ice sheet model responses can be attributed to differences in the models rather than the forcing. ''Note: All datasets needed for the Tier 1, Tier 2, and targeted experiments are available on the UB server. The same datasets are used for the additional targeted experiments. (See [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1J1AjPrnOLqXu-n8BJeYjZqdzXKv6g3wGRWmZt0tGuNc/edit#gid=0 Table])'' ||||||||||||'''Table 1: Tier 1 Experiments'''|| ||'''Exp''' ||'''Model'''||'''Scenario'''||'''Forcing'''||'''Collapse'''||'''Notes'''|| ||AE01||!NorESM1-M||RCP2.6||Repeat||No||Low warming scenario|| ||AE02||CCSM4||RCP8.5||To 2300||No||Extended high-emissions CMIP5 scenario|| ||AE03||!HadGEM2||RCP8.5||To 2300||No|| Extended high-emissions CMIP5 scenario|| ||AE04||CESM2||ssp5-85||To 2300||No||Extended high-emissions CMIP6 scenario|| ||AE05||UKESM||ssp5-85||To 2300||No||Extended high-emissions CMIP6 scenario|| ||AE06||UKESM||ssp5-85||Repeat||No||Repeat forcing for comparison to AE05|| ||||||||||||'''Table 2: Tier 2 Experiments'''|| ||'''Exp''' ||'''Model'''||'''Scenario'''||'''Forcing'''||'''Collapse'''||'''Notes'''|| ||AE07||!NorESM1-M||RCP8.5||Repeat||No||Extension (with repeat forcing) of ISMIP6-Antarctica Exp 1|| ||AE08||!HadGEM2||RCP8.5||Repeat||No||Repeat forcing for comparison to AE03|| ||AE09||CESM2||ssp5-85||Repeat||No||Repeat forcing for comparison to AE04|| ||AE10||UKESM||ssp1-26||To 2300||No||Extended low warming scenario|| ||AE11||CCSM4||RCP8.5||To 2300||Yes||Collapse experiment for comparison to AE02|| ||AE12||!HadGEM||RCP8.5||To 2300||Yes||Collapse experiment for comparison to AE03|| ||AE13||CESM2||ssp5-85||To 2300||Yes||Collapse experiment for comparison to AE04|| ||AE14||UKESM||ssp5-85||To 2300||Yes||Collapse experiment for comparison to AE05 || == Initialization, historical run, control run, and projection runs == All projection experiments start on 1 January 2015 and end on 31 December 2300. The start date follows the CMIP6 protocol for projections, while the end date is constrained by the availability of forcing. The ''initialization date'' (or initial state) is left to each group's discretion and can be any time before January 2015. The initialization date corresponds to the date assigned to the initialization procedure. In many cases, a short ''historical run'' will be needed to bring the models from the initialization date (say, 1990) to the ''projection start date'' of January 2015. Each model configuration should have a '''single''' historical run, from which all the projections will branch. Groups are free to choose the forcing for the historical run – for example, using a reanalysis, historical forcing from an RCM or AOGCM, or a combination of multiple datasets. Groups should not carry out a separate historical run for each AOGCM experiment, because this would complicate the forcing strategy and interpretation. Models without a historical run, e.g. that start directly in January 2015, should report their initial conditions as the historical run. In addition to the projection runs, each model configuration should have a ''projection control run'' (ctrl_proj). This is an unforced simulation that starts in January 2015 in the same ice sheet state as the projections, and continues through 2300. It is meant to capture how much drift arises from the historical run. The projection control run is implemented with ''zero anomalies'' relative to the 20-year AR6 reference period of January 1995 through December 2014. Below, we offer guidance on choosing SMB and ocean forcing climatologies for the reference period. Some experiments (#1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12 and 14 in Tables 1 and 2) use the same forcing for years 2015–2100 as in the original Antarctic projections. However, the CESM2 ssp5-85 forcing (#4, 9 and 13) has changed, coming from a run with a different atmosphere component (WACCM instead of CAM). The low-emission UKESM forcing (#10) was not part of the original projections. For the experiments with identical 21st century forcing, groups that already ran their models through 2100 can simply continue from 1 January 2101, ''provided their ice sheet models have not changed''. If the models have changed, we ask that groups repeat their initialization and historical run, and then start the projections from 2015. For groups choosing AOGCM forcing for the initialization or historical run, ISMIP6 provides an SMB and surface temperature climatology, along with anomalies, for each AOGCM used to generate a projection dataset. For Antarctica, the SMB and temperature climatology corresponds to 1995–2014, to align with the AR6 reference period. Antarctic SMB and temperature anomalies are available from 1950. For the Southern Ocean, the datasets start from 1850, and the climate model climatology corresponds to 1995–2014. Groups using an Antarctica dataset provided by ISMIP6 are recommended to use the !NorESM1-M climatology and anomalies for SMB and surface temperature (in the directory Atmosphere_Forcing/noresm1-m_rcp8.5). [''Bill asks: Are these paths current?''] For the ocean, modelers can use observational climatology (Ocean_Forcing/climatology_from_obs_1995-2017) and/or anomalies (Ocean_Forcing/noresm1-m_rcp8.5/1850-1994). The climate model ocean climatologies (Ocean_Forcing/noresm1-m_rcp8.5/climatology_1995-2014) are not intended for use by modelers, but are provided so that users can see what was subtracted during the dataset preparation, as the ocean forcing data (Ocean_Forcing/noresm1-m_rcp8.5/1850-1994) is the sum of the observational climatology and model anomalies. To better sample uncertainties, we encourage groups to submit results using more than one model configuration – for example, from a model run at two or more grid resolutions, or with substantially different physics options. Each configuration would be associated with a separate suite of up to 14 extension experiments. In this case, it is appropriate to do an independent initialization, historical run, and projection control run for each configuration. == Atmospheric forcing: SMB and temperature anomalies == ISMIP6 provides surface forcing datasets for the AIS based on CMIP AOGCM simulations. Two approaches are possible: using AOGCM output directly, or re-interpreting the GCM climates through higher-resolution regional climate models (RCMs). The latter approach, which better captures large surface mass balance (SMB) gradients regions near the periphery of the ice sheet, has been used for ISMIP6 Greenland experiments (Goelzer et al., 2020). For the Antarctic experiments, RCMs are not used, so SMB anomalies based on AOGCM output are applied directly. For the ISMIP6 projections based on CMIP5 and CMIP6 AOGCMs, the surface forcing consists of anomalies in SMB and surface temperature (illustrated in Fig. 2). SMB is needed by ISMs to compute mass changes at the surface, and surface temperature (i.e., the ice temperature at the base of the snow, as distinct from the 2-m air temperature or skin temperature) is used by many ISMs as an upper boundary condition. The following remarks refer mostly to SMB, but the same comments would generally apply to surface temperature as well. ISMIP6 provides yearly averaged surface mass balance anomalies, aSMB(x,y,t), along with its components (precipitation, evaporation and runoff), as well as the SMB climatologies used to compute the anomalies: aSMB_AOGCM(x,y,t) = SMB_AOGCM(x,y,t) - SMB_CLIM_AOGCM(x,y), where SMB_AOGCM is the SMB for a given AOGCM and SMB_CLIM_AOGCM is the climatology for that AOGCM. The SMB_CLIM_AOGCM were computed by taking the temporal average of all SMB_AOGCM over the reference period (from January 1995 to December 2014). ISMs can use these climatologies for initialization runs, if desired, but are free to use their preferred SMB forcing for these runs. During the projection run, modelers need to reintroduce the climatology that best fits their simulations. SMB is computed as: SMB(x,y,t) = SMB_ref(x,y) + aSMB(x,y,t). where SMB_ref is the SMB that the ice sheet model would have used over the reference period (from January 1995 to December 2014) and should be the same for all experiments. If a time-dependent SMB is used, then SMB_ref(x,y) is the average over the reference period. If an SMB climatology is used, then SMB_ref(x,y) is simply the climatology. ISMIP6 accepts that existing climatologies (or datasets of SMB averaged over many years) may not align exactly with the AR6 reference period. What is important is that SMB_ref is computed over many years. aSMB(x,y,t) is constant over the entire year and changes stepwise at the beginning of the following year. SMB climatologies and anomalies are given in units of kg m^-2^ s^-1^ (water equivalent), and surface temperature in units of deg K. To convert aSMB to units [m yr^-1^ ice] typically used in an ice sheet model, multiply the netcdf variable by 31,556,926 s/yr, 1/1000 m^3^/kg and by the density ratio ρwi: aSMB [m yr^-1^] = aSMB [kg m^-2^ s^-1^] * 31,556,926 / 1000 * (1000/ρ^i^), where ρw = 1000 kg m3 is the density of water, and ρi is your specific ice density (typically 917.0 kg m3 or similar). The datasets can be obtained from the ISMIP6 2300 Forcing Globus endpoint AIS/Atmosphere_Forcing/ (email ismip6-at-gmail.com to obtain the login information). Files are provided for several resolutions (1 km, 2 km, 4 km, 8 km, 16 km, and 32 km). Modeling groups should use the resolution closest to their native grid to conservatively interpolate the data to the model grid (see Appendix 1, below). [[Image(SmbAnomaly.png)]] Figure 2a: SMB anomaly (Gt/yr) timeseries, 1950-2300, for CCSM4, CESM2, !HadGEM2, UKESM, and !NorESM1. All forcings are from high emission scenarios except !NorESM1 RCP2.6. !NorESM1 anomalies are repeat forcings (see overview). [[Image(Smb2300All.png)]] Figure 2b: Change in SMB between the projection start and end date (2300 minus 2015) in units of meters ice equivalent for the AOGCMs shown in Fig. 2a. == Oceanic forcing: temperature, salinity, thermal forcing and melt rate parameterization== ISMIP6 provides datasets of extrapolated ocean "ambient" temperature (T), salinity (S) and thermal forcing (TF) from 1850—2300 that are appropriate for present and future ice-shelf cavities. These datasets originate from CMIP models and have been extrapolated under ice shelves by Xylar Asay-Davis, using rules that account for sills and troughs (Fig. 3). The datasets are on the ISMIP6 8-km Antarctic grid. For more information on how the datasets were produced, please see Nowicki et al. (2020), Jourdain et al (2020), and [https://github.com/xylar/ismip6-ocean-forcing]. [[Image(Ocean_overview_antarctica_basin.png)]] Figure 3: Bathymetry and IMBIE2 basins (left) used in the sub-ice shelf extrapolation of ocean temperature (right). '''Modeling groups are free to use their sub-ice-shelf melt rate parameterization of choice''', provided that the parameterization uses the ocean forcing datasets (T, S, and TF) provided by ISMIP6. The temperature, salinity and thermal forcing data provided for CMIP5 and CMIP6 models are the anomalies of each model with respect to its January 1995—December 2014 average, added to an observational climatology (based on WOA, EN4 and MEOP datasets). Thus, the datasets can be used directly by models without computing anomalies or selecting reference observations of your own. However, groups might need to compute anomalies. In such cases, anomalies should be computed with respect to the January 1995—December 2014 average, as this period was used to anomalize the CMIP5 model input (and is slightly different from the time period, 1995—2017, spanned by the observations). '''Groups with multiple submissions using different melt rate parameterizations''' should carry out all the Tier-1 experiments (Table 1), and optionally the Tier-2 experiments (Table 2), for each submission. Each submission will have an independent initialization and historical run. Groups may use the '''quadratic-dependence melt rate parameterization''' that was developed by the Antarctic ocean focus group and was the standard melt parameterization in ISMIP6 Antarctica (Seroussi et al., 2020). This parameterization is described in detail in Nowicki et al. (2020), Jourdain et al. (2020), [[ISMIP6-Projections-Antarctica]], and Favier et al. (2019). Modeling groups are free to use either median, 5th percentile, or 95th percentile values of the γ0 and ΔT parameters (provided in the /Ocean_Forcing/parameterizations directory), so long as the parameter choice remains consistent. We encourage groups to explore the sensitivity of the melt parameterizations to the values of γ0 and ΔT. In this case, groups should submit independent initialization and historical runs for each configuration. The datasets can be obtained from the ISMIP6 2300 Forcing Globus endpoint AIS/Ocean_Forcing/ (email ismip6-at-gmail.com to obtain the login information). == Antarctic ice shelf collapse == Surface melting can trigger ice shelf collapse (for example, the Larsen B ice shelf in the Antarctic Peninsula). This mechanism is distinct from, but a precursor to, cliff collapse. Although the mechanisms for Larsen B-style ice shelf collapse are not well understood, ISMIP6 provides datasets for ice shelf collapse in the form of a time-dependent mask (Fig. 4). These datasets were derived from AOGCM near-surface air temperature (tas) using the method described in Trusel et al. (2015) to compute annual surface melt. For ISMIP6, Luke Trussel prepared the bias-corrected annual surface melt, which was used to generate the masks. Ice shelves are assumed to collapse following a 10-year period with average surface melt above 725 mm/yr. Some experiments (see Table 2) require modeling ice shelf collapse using the ISMIP6 masks. Ice shelf collapse is included only in Tier-2 experiments and is not a requirement for ISMIP6-2300 participation. Models are free to decide on the appropriate method to simulate tributary glaciers' behavior following ice shelf collapse. Since the masks were derived from observations, the observed ice shelf may not always corresponds to an ice shelf in the ISM. In the event that the ice shelf collapse mask corresponds to a region which the ISM considers to be part of the grounded ice sheet, the collapse should not be imposed. Similarly, in the event that applying the mask results in "icebergs" (i.e., regions of floating ice that are now detached from the main ice shelf), these floating regions should be removed. The datasets can be obtained from the ISMIP6 2300 Forcing Globus endpoint AIS/Ice_Shelf_Fracture/ [[Image(CollapseMaskCcsm.png)]] Figure 4: Ice shelf collapse mask for CCSM4 under RCP8.5 == Requirements and options for the projections == • We encourage participants to contribute results using different models, grid resolutions, physics options, and/or initialization methods. • Models must be able to prescribe a given SMB anomaly. • Models must be able to use an ocean melt parameterization based on ocean thermal forcing evolving over time, such as the one used for the Tier-1 experiments of the ISMIP6-Antarctica Projections. • Adjusting the SMB due to geometric ice-sheet changes in forward experiments is encouraged. • Bedrock adjustment in forward experiments is allowed. • The choice of model input data is unconstrained, to allow participants to use their preferred model setup without modification. Modelers without a preferred dataset can look at the ISMIP6 [Datasets] page for possible options. • To allow for analysis, models must be well documented. Participants must submit a README file along with the model outputs as an integral part of the contribution to ISMIP6. The README template may be obtained [https://www.dropbox.com/s/6snnco54zo76s02/README_AIS_Projections.docx?dl=0|| here] or requested by email to ismip6@gmail.com. ==Appendix 1 – Output grid definition and interpolation== All 2D data is requested on a regular grid with the following description: polar stereographic projection with standard parallel at 71° S and a central meridian of 0° W on datum WGS84. The lower left corner is at (-3040000 m, -3040000 m) and the upper right at (3040000 m, 3040000 m). This is the same grid used to provide the 8-km SMB and oceanic forcings. The output should be submitted at a resolution similar to the native model resolution and can be 32 km, 16 km, 8 km, 4 km, 2 km, or 1 km. The data will be stored at this resolution for archiving and conservatively interpolated to the 8-km grid for diagnostic processing by ISMIP6. Output should be provided with single precision. If interpolation is required to transform the SMB forcing to your native grid, and to transform your model variables to a standard ISMIP6 output grid (32 km, 16 km, 8 km, 4 km, 2 km, or 1 km), conservative interpolation must be used. This requirement minimizes model-to-model differences due to the choice of interpolation method. ===A1.1 Regridding Tools and Tips === * An overview of the regridding process can be found on the [[Regridding]] page. * [[Regridding_with_CDO]] contains tools and tips that have been used by ISMIP6 members. * ISMIP6 is designing tools to help with the regridding. * If you need help with conservative interpolation, please email ismip6-at-gmail.com. ==Appendix 2 – Naming conventions, upload and model output data== '''COMING SOON: GUIDANCE FOR CMIP6 MODEL REGISTRATION, ADDITIONAL GUIDANCE FOR FILE PREPARATIONS and REVISED FILENAME CONVENTION. HOWEVER, THE CURRENT FILE STRUCTURE AND GUIDANCE BELOW IS DESIGNED TO FACILITATE THE FINAL FILE PREPARATION (NEEDED BEFORE UPLOADING TO THE CMIP6 ARCHIVE). THE EXTRA INFORMATION/FILE RENAMING WILL BE IMPLEMENTED BY SCRIPTS CURRENTLY WRITTEN BY ISMIP6, WHICH WILL ALSO CHECK FOR CF COMPLIANCE ETC. WE WILL PROVIDE HELP TO MODELERS FOR THE FINAL FILE FORMATING PREPARATION, AND MODELERS SHOULD PROCEED WITH SAVING THEIR RESULTS USING THE INFORMATION BELOW ''' Please provide: • one variable per file for all 2D fields and scalar variables • a completed readme file • single precision should be used for all output ===A2.1 File name convention=== File name convention for 2D fields and scalar variables: {{{ ____.nc }}} File name convention for readme file: {{{ README___.doc }}} where {{{ = variable name (e.g. lithk) = ice sheet (AIS or GIS) = group acronym (all upper case or numbers, no special characters) = model acronym (all upper case or numbers, no special characters) = experiment name (from the experiment list, e.g. AE01) }}} For example, a file containing the variable "orog" for the Antarctic ice sheet, submitted by group “JPL” with model “ISSM” for experiment 'AE05' would be called: {{{ orog_AIS_JPL_ISSM_AE05.nc }}} If JPL repeats the experiments with a different version of the model (for example, by changing the sliding law), the model could be named ISSM2, and so forth. ===A2.2 Retrieving datasets and uploading your model output=== We are using the University at Buffalo Ghub portal to provide forcing datasets and submit model results. ====A2.2.1 How to access the forcing data==== All ISMIP6 datasets, including all the forcing files needed to run the Antarctic 2300 simulations, are stored at the University of Buffalo’s GHub. GHub can be accessed using Globus and requires to create an account. In order to access the ISMIP6 datasets and upload or download files, please send a request to ismip6 [at] gmail.com address with your name and affiliation for account setup. ====A2.2.2 Where to upload your results==== Model results should also be uploaded on GHub. Once ready to upload your results, you should send an email to ismip6 [at] gmail.com and ask that a new directory be created for your model results. You will then be able to upload your results in this directory using Globus. ====A2.2.3 Reducing the size of files==== The size of the model files on higher-resolution grids can be reduced by file compression, which will save space on the storage server. Example commands are given below. Using these commands, we can get 10x compression, and for the masks even more given that contiguous masks contain repeated data. NetCDF files have been designed with compression in mind. A NetCDF file can be compressed without changing the way it is read into Matlab or Python (or any other language that uses standard NetCDF read/write libraries). The nccopy command copies an input netCDF file to an output netCDF file after compressing the file significantly. The ‘-d’ option stands for the deflation level, from 1 (faster but lower compression) to 9 (slower but more compression). The ‘-s’ option is the shuffling option to improve compression even more. We recommend using the ‘d1’ option, which seems to accomplish the desired compression. Example of netcdf compression command: {{{ nccopy -d1 -s sftgif_GIS_JPL_ISSMPALEO_historical.nc sftgif_GIS_JPL_ISSMPALEO_historical_c.nc }}} Example of compression variant, seems to work better for masks: {{{ nccopy -d1 sftgif_GIS_JPL_ISSMPALEO_historical.nc sftgif_GIS_JPL_ISSMPALEO_historical_c.nc }}} ===A2.3 Model output variables and README file=== The README file is an important contribution to the ISMIP6 submission. A template may be obtained [https://drive.google.com/open?id=1HOtbZhVUttXwsYPdJp0dsUqVZDcO6yN4&authuser=helene.l.seroussi%40dartmouth.edu&usp=drive_fs|| here] or requested by email to ismip6-at-gmail.com. ====A2.3.1 General guidelines==== The variables requested in Table A1 serve to evaluate and compare the different models and initialization techniques. Some variables may not apply to your model, in which case they can be omitted (with an explanation in the README file). We distinguish between state variables "ST" (e.g., ice thickness, temperatures, and velocities) and flux variables "FL" (e.g., SMB). State variables should be given as snapshot information at the end of each year for both scalars and 2D variables (for initMIP, 2D variables were requested only over five-year periods), while flux variables should be averaged over the respective period. Please specify in your README file how your reported flux data has been averaged over time. Ideally, fluxes are averaged over all native model time steps. Flux variables are defined as positive when the process adds mass to the ice sheet and negative otherwise. All "missing data" must be assigned the single-precision floating point value of 1.e20. Fields should be undefined outside the ice mask. ====A2.3.2 How to record time in historical and projection files==== In compliance with CMIP6, time should be defined in "days since ", where must be specified by the user, typically in the form year-month-day (e.g., "days since 1800-1-1"). For simulations meant to represent a particular historical period, set the ‘base time’ to the time at the beginning of the simulation. A historical run initialized with forcing for year 2007 would, for example, have units of “days since 2007-1-1”. For the future scenario runs, retain the same as used in the historical run from which it was initiated. Note the CF definition for years ([http://cfconventions.org/Data/cf-conventions/cf-conventions-1.7/cf-conventions.html#paleoclimate-time-axis-ex. section 4.4]): a common_year is 365 days, a leap_year is 366 days, a Julian_year is 365.25 days, a Gregorian_year is 365.2425 days, a 360_day year has 360 days divided into twelve 30-day months (please see the CF link above for other examples on calendar setting in section 4.4). To illustrate a time recording for the historical file and projections for a typical state variable (ST, e.g. thickness) and flux variable (FL, e.g. SMB), we assume that our is January 1st 2013, and that we use a calendar = 360_days. '''Other calendars can be used, but you need to indicate the calendar used in the netcdf file, and of course if you use a different calendar, the time entries will be different.''' What needs to be recorded is shown in green in the Table below. For state variables,