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Interglacials of the last 800,000 years ArchiMer
Berger, A.; Crucifix, M.; Hodell, D. A.; Mangili, C.; Mcmanus, J. F.; Otto-bliesner, B.; Pol, K.; Raynaud, D.; Skinner, L. C.; Tzedakis, P. C.; Wolff, E. W.; Yin, Q. Z.; Abe-ouchi, A.; Barbante, C.; Brovkin, V.; Cacho, I.; Capron, E.; Ferretti, P.; Ganopolski, A.; Grimalt, J. O.; Hoenisch, B.; Kawamura, K.; Landais, A.; Margari, V.; Martrat, B.; Masson-delmotte, V.; Mokeddem, Zohra; Parrenin, F.; Prokopenko, A. A.; Rashid, H.; Schulz, M.; Riveiros, N. Vazquez.
Interglacials, including the present (Holocene) period, are warm, low land ice extent (high sea level), end-members of glacial cycles. Based on a sea level definition, we identify eleven interglacials in the last 800,000years, a result that is robust to alternative definitions. Data compilations suggest that despite spatial heterogeneity, Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 5e (last interglacial) and 11c (similar to 400ka ago) were globally strong (warm), while MIS 13a (similar to 500ka ago) was cool at many locations. A step change in strength of interglacials at 450ka is apparent only in atmospheric CO2 and in Antarctic and deep ocean temperature. The onset of an interglacial (glacial termination) seems to require a reducing precession parameter (increasing...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Interglacials; Review; Quaternary.
Ano: 2016 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00340/45150/44547.pdf
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Enhanced climate instability in the North Atlantic and southern Europe during the Last Interglacial ArchiMer
Tzedakis, P. C.; Drysdale, R. N.; Margari, V.; Skinner, L. C.; Menviel, L.; Rhodes, R. H.; Taschetto, A. S.; Hodell, D. A.; Crowhurst, S. J.; Hellstrom, J. C.; Fallick, A. E.; Grimalt, J. O.; Mcmanus, J. F.; Martrat, B.; Mokeddem, Zohra; Parrenin, F.; Regattieri, E.; Roe, K.; Zanchetta, G..
Considerable ambiguity remains over the extent and nature of millennial/centennial-scale climate instability during the Last Interglacial (LIG). Here we analyse marine and terrestrial proxies from a deep-sea sediment sequence on the Portuguese Margin and combine results with an intensively dated Italian speleothem record and climate-model experiments. The strongest expression of climate variability occurred during the transitions into and out of the LIG. Our records also document a series of multi-centennial intra-interglacial arid events in southern Europe, coherent with cold water-mass expansions in the North Atlantic. The spatial and temporal fingerprints of these changes indicate a reorganization of ocean surface circulation, consistent with...
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Ano: 2018 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00461/57261/59304.pdf
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The timing of deglacial circulation changes in the Atlantic ArchiMer
Waelbroeck, C.; Skinner, L. C.; Labeyrie, L.; Duplessy, J. -c.; Michel, E.; Vazquez Riveiros, Natalia; Gherardi, J. M.; Dewilde, F..
Well-dated benthic foraminifer oxygen isotopic records (delta O-18) from different water depths and locations within the Atlantic Ocean exhibit distinct patterns and significant differences in timing over the last deglaciation. This has two implications: on the one hand, it confirms that benthic delta O-18 cannot be used as a global correlation tool with millennial-scale precision, but on the other hand, the combination of benthic isotopic records with independent dating provides a wealth of information on past circulation changes. Comparing new South Atlantic benthic isotopic data with published benthic isotopic records, we show that (1) circulation changes first affected benthic delta O-18 in the 1000-2200 m range, with marked decreases in benthic delta...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Atlantic Ocean; Benthic oxygen isotope; Last deglaciation; Ocean circulation.
Ano: 2011 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00214/32517/31003.pdf
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Revisiting the absolute calibration of the Greenland ice-core age-scales ArchiMer
Skinner, L. C..
Recently, an absolute "calibration" was proposed for the GRIP and GISP2 Greenland ice-core time scales (Shackleton et al., 2004). This calibration attempted to reconcile the stratigraphic integration of ice-core, marine and speleothem archives with the absolute age constraints that marine and speleothem records incorporate. Here we revisit this calibration in light of the new layer-counted chronology of the NGRIP ice-core (GICC05). The GICC05 age-scale differs from the proposed absolute calibration by up to 1200 years late in the last glaciation, with implications both for radiocarbon cycling and the inferred timing of North Atlantic climate events relative to radiometrically dated archives (e.g. relative sea-level). By aligning the stratigraphy of Iberian...
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Ano: 2008 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00238/34894/33134.pdf
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Can we predict the duration of an interglacial? ArchiMer
Tzedakis, P. C.; Wolff, E. W.; Skinner, L. C.; Brovkin, V.; Hodell, D. A.; Mcmanus, J. F.; Raynaud, D..
Differences in the duration of interglacials have long been apparent in palaeoclimate records of the Late and Middle Pleistocene. However, a systematic evaluation of such differences has been hampered by the lack of a metric that can be applied consistently through time and by difficulties in separating the local from the global component in various proxies. This, in turn, means that a theoretical framework with predictive power for interglacial duration has remained elusive. Here we propose that the interval between the terminal oscillation of the bipolar seesaw and three thousand years (kyr) before its first major reactivation provides an estimate that approximates the length of the sea-level high-stand, a measure of interglacial duration. We apply this...
Tipo: Text
Ano: 2012 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00266/37694/35838.pdf
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Similar millennial climate variability on the Iberian margin during two early Pleistocene glacials and MIS 3 ArchiMer
Birner, B.; Hodell, D. A.; Tzedakis, P. C.; Skinner, L. C..
Although millennial-scale climate variability (<10ka) has been well studied during the last glacial cycles, little is known about this important aspect of climate in the early Pleistocene, prior to the Middle Pleistocene Transition. Here we present an early Pleistocene climate record at centennial resolution for two representative glacials (marine isotope stages (MIS) 37-41 from approximately 1235 to 1320ka) during the 41ka world at Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site U1385 (the Shackleton Site) on the southwest Iberian margin. Millennial-scale climate variability was suppressed during interglacial periods (MIS37, MIS39, and MIS41) and activated during glacial inceptions when benthic O-18 exceeded 3.2. Millennial variability during glacials MIS38 and...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Millennial variability; Interhemispheric linkage; Iberian margin; Early Pleistocene.
Ano: 2016 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00421/53289/54199.pdf
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Atlantic Ocean ventilation changes across the last deglaciation and their carbon cycle implications ArchiMer
Skinner, L. C.; Freeman, E.; Hodell, D.; Waelbroeck, C.; Vazquez Riveiros, Natalia; Scrivner, A.e.
Changes in ocean ventilation, controlled by both overturning rates and air‐sea gas exchange, are thought to have played a central role in atmospheric CO2 rise across the last deglaciation. Here we constrain the nature of Atlantic Ocean ventilation changes over the last deglaciation using radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopes from two depth transects in the Atlantic basin. Our findings broadly cohere with the established pattern of deglacial Atlantic overturning change, and underline the existence of active northern sourced deep‐water export at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). We find that the western Atlantic was less affected by incursions of southern‐sourced deep water, as compared to the eastern Atlantic, despite both sides of the basin being strongly...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Air&#8208; Sea exchange; AMOC; Carbon cycle; Deglaciation; Radiocarbon; Ventilation.
Ano: 2021 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00665/77717/79810.pdf
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Radiocarbon evidence for enhanced respired carbon storage in the Atlantic at the Last Glacial Maximum ArchiMer
Freeman, E.; Skinner, L. C.; Waelbroeck, C.; Hodell, D..
The influence of ocean circulation changes on atmospheric CO2 hinges primarily on the ability to alter the ocean interior's respired nutrient inventory. Here we investigate the Atlantic overturning circulation at the Last Glacial Maximum and its impact on respired carbon storage using radiocarbon and stable carbon isotope data from the Brazil and Iberian Margins. The data demonstrate the existence of a shallow well-ventilated northern-sourced cell overlying a poorly ventilated, predominantly southern-sourced cell at the Last Glacial Maximum. We also find that organic carbon remineralization rates in the deep Atlantic remained broadly similar to modern, but that ventilation ages in the southern-sourced overturning cell were significantly increased. Respired...
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Ano: 2016 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00421/53241/54750.pdf
Registros recuperados: 8
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