Leeuwin Current dynamics over the last 60 kyr – relation to Australian ecosystem and Southern Ocean change
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Published:2022-11-15
Issue:11
Volume:18
Page:2483-2507
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Nürnberg Dirk,Kayode Akintunde,Meier Karl J. F.,Karas Cyrus
Abstract
Abstract. The Leeuwin Current, flowing southward along the western coast of Australia, is an important
conduit for the poleward heat transport and inter-ocean water exchange
between the tropical and the subantarctic ocean areas. Its past development
and its relationship to Southern Ocean change and Australian ecosystem
response is, however, largely unknown. Here we reconstruct sea surface and
thermocline temperatures and salinities from foraminiferal-based Mg/Ca and
stable oxygen isotopes from areas offshore of southwestern and southeastern Australia,
reflecting the Leeuwin Current dynamics over the last 60 kyr. Their
variability resembles the biomass burning development in Australasia from
∼60–20 ka BP, implying that climate-modulated changes related
to the Leeuwin Current most likely affected Australian vegetational and fire
regimes. Particularly during ∼60–43 ka BP, the warmest
thermocline temperatures point to a strongly developed Leeuwin Current
during Antarctic cool periods when the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC)
weakened. The pronounced centennial-scale variations in Leeuwin Current
strength appear to be in line with the migrations of the Southern Hemisphere
frontal system and are captured by prominent changes in the Australian
megafauna biomass. We argue that the concerted action of a rapidly changing
Leeuwin Current, the ecosystem response in Australia, and human interference
since ∼50 BP enhanced the ecological stress on the Australian
megafauna until its extinction at ∼43 ka BP. While being
weakest during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the deglacial Leeuwin Current
intensified at times of poleward migrations of the Subtropical Front
(STF). During the Holocene, the thermocline off southern Australia was
considerably shallower compared to the short-term glacial and deglacial
periods of Leeuwin Current intensification.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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