McClymont, Erin L. and Rosell-Mele, Antoni (2005): Links between the onset of modern Walker circulation and the mid-Pleistocene climate transition

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 130
ODP 138
ODP 130 806
ODP 138 849
Identifier:
2005-034355
georefid

10.1130/G21292.1
doi

Creator:
McClymont, Erin L.
University of Durham, Department of Geography, Durham, United Kingdom
author

Rosell-Mele, Antoni
Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain
author

Identification:
Links between the onset of modern Walker circulation and the mid-Pleistocene climate transition
2005
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
33
5
389-392
Sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) reconstructed from Ocean Drilling Program Sites 806 and 849 in the western and eastern equatorial Pacific provide a history of the strength of the Walker circulation between 1.5 and 0.5 Ma. A progressive cooling in the eastern equatorial Pacific is paralleled by intensification of the equatorial zonal SST gradient that began 1.17 Ma, prior to the expansion of global ice volume associated with the mid-Pleistocene climate transition. The SSTs in the eastern equatorial Pacific and the zonal gradient reached modern values by 0.9 Ma. We propose that this onset and intensification of the modern Walker circulation reduced heat flux, but increased moisture transport to high latitudes, leading to the development of more extensive ice sheets and the shift toward the 100 ka world.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:0.1907
West:-110.3111East: 159.2142
South:0.1058

Quaternary geology; Cenozoic; climate change; cooling; cores; currents; El Nino Southern Oscillation; Equatorial Pacific; Foraminifera; glaciation; heat flux; Invertebrata; Leg 130; Leg 138; marine sediments; ocean circulation; ocean currents; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 806; ODP Site 849; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; Pleistocene; Protista; Quaternary; reconstruction; sea-surface temperature; sediments; tropical environment; Walker Circulation; winds;

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