Proistosescu, Cristian et al. (2012): To tune or not to tune; detecting orbital variability in Oligo-Miocene climate records

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 177
ODP 199
ODP 177 1090
ODP 199 1218
Identifier:
2012-069043
georefid

10.1016/j.epsl.2012.01.022
doi

Creator:
Proistosescu, Cristian
Harvard University, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Cambridge, MA, United States
author

Huybers, Peter
Princeton University, United States
author

Maloof, Adam C.
author

Identification:
To tune or not to tune; detecting orbital variability in Oligo-Miocene climate records
2012
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
325-326
100-107
We address the problem of detecting quasi-periodic variability at orbital frequencies within pre-Pleistocene climate records using depth-derived and orbitally tuned chronologies. Many studies describing orbital variability in pre-Pleistocene sediment hosted isotope records employ climatic records that are set on orbitally tuned chronologies, without accounting for the bias in spectral power estimates introduced by orbital tuning. In this study we develop a method to quantify the effects of tuning upon spectral estimates and, in particular, to more properly determine the statistical significance of spectral peaks associated with orbital frequencies. We apply this method to two marine sediment delta (super 18) O records spanning the Oligo-Miocene, from ODP cores 1090 and 1218. We find that using linear age-depth relationships reveals statistically significant spectral peaks matching eccentricity in core 1090, and obliquity and precession in core 1218, where the last appears most significant. Tuning the chronologies to the orbital solutions of Laskar et al. (2004) increases the statistical significance of the precession peak, whereas the obliquity and eccentricity peaks become indistinguishable from those expected from tuning noise. This result can be understood in that tuning records with high signal to noise ratios tends to lead to more significant spectral peaks, whereas a linear age-depth relationship is better suited for detecting peaks when signal to noise ratios are low. We also demonstrate this concept using synthetic records. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:8.5300
West:-135.2200East: 8.5359
South:-42.5449

Stratigraphy; astrochronology; Atlantic Ocean; Cenozoic; chronology; climate forcing; East Pacific; Equatorial Pacific; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 177; Leg 199; Milankovitch theory; Miocene; Monte Carlo analysis; Neogene; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; O-18/O-16; obliquity of the ecliptic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1090; ODP Site 1218; Oligocene; orbital forcing; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; paleoclimatology; Paleogene; precession; signal-to-noise ratio; South Atlantic; stable isotopes; statistical analysis; Tertiary; variations;

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