A stalagmite test of North Atlantic SST and Iberian hydroclimate linkages over the last two glacial cycles
Close coupling of Iberian hydroclimate and North Atlantic sea surface temperature (SST) during recent glacial periods has been identified through the analysis of marine sediment and pollen grains co-deposited on the Portuguese continental margin. While offering precisely correlatable records, these...
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Published in | Climate of the past Vol. 14; no. 12; pp. 1893 - 1913 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Katlenburg-Lindau
Copernicus GmbH
11.12.2018
Copernicus Publications |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Close coupling of Iberian hydroclimate and North Atlantic sea
surface temperature (SST) during recent glacial periods has been identified
through the analysis of marine sediment and pollen grains co-deposited on the
Portuguese continental margin. While offering precisely correlatable records,
these time series have lacked a directly dated, site-specific record of
continental Iberian climate spanning multiple glacial cycles as a point of
comparison. Here we present a high-resolution, multi-proxy (growth dynamics
and
δ13C, δ18O, and δ234U
values) composite stalagmite record of hydroclimate from two caves in western
Portugal across the majority of the last two glacial cycles (∼220 ka).
At orbital and millennial scales, stalagmite-based proxies for hydroclimate
proxies covaried with SST, with elevated δ13C,
δ18O, and δ234U values and/or growth hiatuses
indicating reduced effective moisture coincident with periods of lowered SST
during major ice-rafted debris events, in agreement with changes in
palynological reconstructions of continental climate. While in many cases the
Portuguese stalagmite record can be scaled to SST, in some intervals the
magnitudes of stalagmite isotopic shifts, and possibly hydroclimate, appear
to have been somewhat decoupled from SST. |
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ISSN: | 1814-9332 1814-9324 1814-9332 |
DOI: | 10.5194/cp-14-1893-2018 |