Relative Timing of Deglacial Climate Events in Antarctica and Greenland

Author:

Morgan Vin1,Delmotte Marc23,van Ommen Tas1,Jouzel Jean3,Chappellaz Jérôme2,Woon Suenor1,Masson-Delmotte Valérie3,Raynaud Dominique2

Affiliation:

1. Antarctic Cooperative Research Centre and Australian Antarctic Division, GPO Box 252-80, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.

2. CNRS/Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Geophysique de l'Environment, 54 Rue Molière, B.P. 96, 38402 St. Martin d'Hères Cedex, France.

3. Institut Pierre-Simon Laplacer Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et L'Environment, Unite Mixte de Recherche Commissariat àl'Energie Atomique-CNRS 1572, l'Orme des Merisiers, CEA Saclay, 91191 Gif sur Yvette Cedex, France.

Abstract

The last deglaciation was marked by large, hemispheric, millennial-scale climate variations: the Bølling-Allerød and Younger Dryas periods in the north, and the Antarctic Cold Reversal in the south. A chronology from the high-accumulation Law Dome East Antarctic ice core constrains the relative timing of these two events and provides strong evidence that the cooling at the start of the Antarctic Cold Reversal did not follow the abrupt warming during the northern Bølling transition around 14,500 years ago. This result suggests that southern changes are not a direct response to abrupt changes in North Atlantic thermohaline circulation, as is assumed in the conventional picture of a hemispheric temperature seesaw.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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