Modelling abrupt glacial North Atlantic freshening: Rates of change and their implications for Heinrich events

The abrupt delivery of large amounts of freshwater to the North Atlantic in the form of water or icebergs has been thought to lead to significant climate change, including abrupt slowing of the Atlantic Ocean meridional overturning circulation. In this paper we examine intermediate complexity couple...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Bigg, G.R, Levine, R.C, Green, C.L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier 01.12.2011
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The abrupt delivery of large amounts of freshwater to the North Atlantic in the form of water or icebergs has been thought to lead to significant climate change, including abrupt slowing of the Atlantic Ocean meridional overturning circulation. In this paper we examine intermediate complexity coupled modelling evidence to estimate the rates of change, and recovery, in oceanic climate that would be expected for such events occurring during glacial times from likely sources around the North Atlantic and Arctic periphery. We show that rates of climate change are slower for events with a European or Arctic origin. Palaeoceanographic data are presented to consider, through the model results, the origin and likely strength of major ice-rafting, or Heinrich, events during the last glacial period. We suggest that Heinrich events H1-H3 are likely to have had a significant contribution from an Arctic source as well as Hudson Strait, leading to the observed climate change. In the case of H1 and H2, we hypothesise that this secondary input is from a Laurentide Arctic source, but the dominant iceberg release for H3 is hypothesised to derive from the northern Fennoscandian Ice Sheet, rather than Hudson Strait. Earlier Heinrich events are suggested to be predominantly Hudson Strait in origin, with H6 having the lowest climate impact, and hence iceberg flux, but H4 having a climate signal of geographically variable length. We hypothesise that this is linked to a combination of climate-affecting events occurring around the globe at this time, and not just of Laurentide origin. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
AbstractList The abrupt delivery of large amounts of freshwater to the North Atlantic in the form of water or icebergs has been thought to lead to significant climate change, including abrupt slowing of the Atlantic Ocean meridional overturning circulation. In this paper we examine intermediate complexity coupled modelling evidence to estimate the rates of change, and recovery, in oceanic climate that would be expected for such events occurring during glacial times from likely sources around the North Atlantic and Arctic periphery. We show that rates of climate change are slower for events with a European or Arctic origin. Palaeoceanographic data are presented to consider, through the model results, the origin and likely strength of major ice-rafting, or Heinrich, events during the last glacial period. We suggest that Heinrich events H1-H3 are likely to have had a significant contribution from an Arctic source as well as Hudson Strait, leading to the observed climate change. In the case of H1 and H2, we hypothesise that this secondary input is from a Laurentide Arctic source, but the dominant iceberg release for H3 is hypothesised to derive from the northern Fennoscandian Ice Sheet, rather than Hudson Strait. Earlier Heinrich events are suggested to be predominantly Hudson Strait in origin, with H6 having the lowest climate impact, and hence iceberg flux, but H4 having a climate signal of geographically variable length. We hypothesise that this is linked to a combination of climate-affecting events occurring around the globe at this time, and not just of Laurentide origin. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Author Bigg, G.R
Levine, R.C
Green, C.L
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  fullname: Bigg, G.R
– sequence: 2
  fullname: Levine, R.C
– sequence: 3
  fullname: Green, C.L
BookMark eNqFyr8KwjAQgPEMOvjvEYR7AcF2sbgVUbroIOJazvSSHMRLSU6fXwd3p2_4fXMzkSQ0M3JOA8XI4gEf-TUq-IiWMcIlZQ3QakRRtuAylUDyHfdwRaUCyYENKJ4AZQANxBn4OUa2qJykgEsZOmLJbAPQm0TL0kwdxkKrXxdmfTreDt3GYerRZy59e6-3Vb1tqmbX1P_8A66OQIw
ContentType Journal Article
DBID FBQ
DatabaseName AGRIS
DatabaseTitleList
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: FBQ
  name: AGRIS
  url: http://www.fao.org/agris/Centre.asp?Menu_1ID=DB&Menu_2ID=DB1&Language=EN&Content=http://www.fao.org/agris/search?Language=EN
  sourceTypes: Publisher
DeliveryMethod no_fulltext_linktorsrc
ExternalDocumentID AV2012081878
GroupedDBID FBQ
ID FETCH-fao_agris_AV20120818782
IngestDate Tue Nov 07 23:25:42 EST 2023
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-fao_agris_AV20120818782
Notes Bigg, G.R., Levine, R.C. and Green, C.L. (2011) Modelling abrupt glacial North Atlantic freshening: Rates of change and their implications for Heinrich events. Global and Planetary Change, 79 (3-4). pp. 176-192. ISSN 0921-8181
http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/43722/2/WRRO_43722.pdf
ParticipantIDs fao_agris_AV2012081878
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2011-12
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2011-12-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 12
  year: 2011
  text: 2011-12
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationYear 2011
Publisher Elsevier
Publisher_xml – name: Elsevier
Score 3.0122907
Snippet The abrupt delivery of large amounts of freshwater to the North Atlantic in the form of water or icebergs has been thought to lead to significant climate...
SourceID fao
SourceType Publisher
Title Modelling abrupt glacial North Atlantic freshening: Rates of change and their implications for Heinrich events
hasFullText
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnZ3PS8MwFMeD04sXUXT4a_IO3kbLmOnWepviKDIFx5TdRrK-uoF0Y8yLf73fpD8HE9RLKAmE9vNCXvLyfakQ1y2flUSLwzesHdn1lBN4LXbYizF6OhxJZeIdT8-d8FU-jr1x-XdQm12y1u70a2teyX-sijrY1WTJ_sGyRaeowDPsixIWRvkrG5sfmaV3aiu9-lya6z2UDYFnpzHrD3CbT5sx9tQzTrLc5qFZXlo5uc0syDWU85VJmSzl5UZ_GPI8wUQ5a9p7njYi6jag7hbnRAM42DQ4OnSLwKsV9dhQrDuohheMvm1DqpHnvZTuohDx9d7aJvMWHr_r10St65tppn_3Ai8dq6qXHh2Kg2x5Tb2U1ZHY4eRYJAUnSjlRxoksJ8o5UcnpliwlWsSUUiJQIkuJqpQIlCinRCmlE9HoP4zuQwfvN1HvmEUn1Y9o18Vuskj4VFDLi3iqgkB2dCAVljXYZ0aSA82oj7Q8E_XtfZz_1HAh9ku8l2IvxhjkBhY0a31lsX0D2GUEIQ
link.rule.ids 783
linkProvider FAO Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Modelling+abrupt+glacial+North+Atlantic+freshening%3A+Rates+of+change+and+their+implications+for+Heinrich+events&rft.au=Bigg%2C+G.R&rft.au=Levine%2C+R.C&rft.au=Green%2C+C.L&rft.date=2011-12-01&rft.pub=Elsevier&rft.externalDocID=AV2012081878