Sea surface temperature in the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean over the Late Glacial and Holocene
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Published:2020-08-07
Issue:4
Volume:16
Page:1451-1467
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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:
Orme Lisa Claire, Crosta Xavier, Miettinen Arto, Divine Dmitry V., Husum KatrineORCID, Isaksson Elisabeth, Wacker LukasORCID, Mohan Rahul, Ther Olivier, Ikehara MinoruORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Centennial- and millennial-scale variability of Southern
Ocean temperature over the Holocene is poorly known, due to both short
instrumental records and sparsely distributed high-resolution temperature
reconstructions, with evidence for past temperature variations in the region
coming mainly from ice core records. Here we present a high-resolution
(∼60 year), diatom-based sea surface temperature (SST)
reconstruction from the western Indian sector of the Southern Ocean that
spans the interval 14.2 to 1.0 ka (calibrated kiloyears before present). During the late deglaciation, the new SST record shows cool temperatures at 14.2–12.9 ka and gradual warming between 12.9 and 11.6 ka in phase with atmospheric temperature evolution. This supports the evolution of the
Southern Ocean SST during the deglaciation being linked with a complex
combination of processes and drivers associated with reorganisations of
atmospheric and oceanic circulation patterns. Specifically, we suggest that
Southern Ocean surface warming coincided, within the dating uncertainties,
with the reconstructed slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation (AMOC), rising atmospheric CO2 levels, changes in the
southern westerly winds and enhanced upwelling. During the Holocene the
record shows warm and stable temperatures from 11.6 to 8.7 ka followed by a slight cooling and greater variability from 8.7 to 1 ka, with a
quasi-periodic variability of 200–260 years identified by spectral analysis. We suggest that the increased variability during the mid- to late Holocene reflects the establishment of centennial variability in SST connected with changes in the high-latitude atmospheric circulation and Southern Ocean convection.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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