Nielsen, Simon H. H. et al. (2004): Holocene climate in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean; controlled by insolation or oceanic circulation?

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 178
Identifier:
2004-060780
georefid

10.1130/G20334.1
doi

Creator:
Nielsen, Simon H. H.
Norwegian Polar Institute, Polar Environmental Center, Tromso, Norway
author

Koc, Nalan
Universite de Bordeaux I, France
author

Crosta, Xavier
author

Identification:
Holocene climate in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean; controlled by insolation or oceanic circulation?
2004
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
32
4
317-320
The Holocene climate of the Southern Ocean is not well understood, mainly because of the lack of high-resolution reconstructions of ocean surface properties. Here we present a 12,500-yr-long, decadal-scale record of Holocene sea-surface temperatures and sea-ice presence from the Polar Front of the East Atlantic Southern Ocean. The record shows gradual climate change, with no abrupt Neoglacial cooling, and an unprecedented late Holocene warming. The dominant forcing factor appears to be precessional insolation; Northern Hemisphere summer insolation correlates to at least the early to middle Holocene climate trend. Spectral analysis reveals centennial-scale cyclic climate changes with periods of 1220, 1070, 400, and 150 yr. The record shows good correlation to East Antarctic ice cores and to climate records from South Georgia and Bunger Oasis. However, the record shows out-of-phase behavior with regard to climate records from the western Antarctic Peninsula and the Peru-Chile Current; such behavior hints at a climatic divide through Patagonia, the Drake Passage, and between West and East Antarctica.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-50.0000
West:6.0000East: 6.0000
South:-50.0000

Quaternary geology; absolute age; algae; Antarctic Polar Front; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; climate change; cores; dates; decadal variations; diatoms; Holocene; ice; insolation; isotopes; Leg 178; microfossils; modern analogs; ocean circulation; Ocean Drilling Program; ooze; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; paleotemperature; Plantae; precession; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; sea ice; sea-surface temperature; sediments; Southern Ocean; statistical analysis; time series analysis;

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