Dickson, Alexander J. et al. (2010): Oceanic, atmospheric and ice-sheet forcing of South east Atlantic Ocean productivity and South African monsoon intensity during MIS-12 to 10

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 175
ODP 175 1085
Identifier:
2012-017054
georefid

10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.09.014
doi

Creator:
Dickson, Alexander J.
University College London, Department of Geography, London, United Kingdom
author

Leng, Melanie J.
NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory, United Kingdom
author

Maslin, Mark A.
University of Bremen, Germany
author

Rohl, Ursula
author

Identification:
Oceanic, atmospheric and ice-sheet forcing of South east Atlantic Ocean productivity and South African monsoon intensity during MIS-12 to 10
2010
Quaternary Science Reviews
Elsevier, International
29
27-28
3936-3947
Variations in the strength of coastal upwelling in the South East Atlantic Ocean and summer monsoonal rains over South Africa are controlled by the regional atmospheric circulation regime. Although information about these parameters exists for the last glacial period, little detailed information exists for older time periods. New information from ODP Site 1085 for Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 12-10 shows that glacial-interglacial productivity trends linked to upwelling variability followed a pattern similar to the last glacial cycle, with maximums shortly before glacial maxima, and minimums shortly before glacial terminations. During the MIS-11/10 transition, several periodic oscillations in productivity and monsoonal proxies are best explained by southwards shifts in the southern sub-tropical high-pressure cells followed by abrupt northwards shifts. Comparison to coeval sea-surface temperature measurements suggests that these monsoonal cycles were tightly coupled to anti-phased hemispheric climate change, with an intensified summer monsoon during periods of Northern (Southern) Hemisphere cooling (warming). The timing of these events suggests a pacing by insolation over precession periods. A lack of similar regional circulation shifts during the MIS-13/12 transition is likely due to the large equatorwards shift in the tropical convection zone that occurred during this extreme glaciation. Abstract Copyright (2010) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-29.2228
West:13.5924East: 13.5924
South:-29.2228

Quaternary geology; Africa; Atlantic Ocean; C-13/C-12; Cape Basin; carbon; Cenozoic; chemostratigraphy; climate change; cores; glacial environment; glacial geology; ice sheets; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 175; marine sediments; middle Pleistocene; MIS 10; MIS 12; monsoons; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1085; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; productivity; Quaternary; sediments; South Africa; South Atlantic; Southeast Atlantic; Southern Africa; stable isotopes; upwelling;

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