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Partin et al. 2007 Northern Borneo Stalagmite Oxygen Isotope Data
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Partin, J.W.;Cobb, K.M.;Adkins, J.F.;Clark, B.;Fernandez, D.P. 2007 Millennial-scale trends in west Pacific warm pool hydrology
since the Last Glacial Maximum. Nature Vol. 449, Number 7161, pp. pp. 452-455, 27 September 2007.
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North: 4.03 * South: 4.03 |
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West: 114.8 * East: 114.8 |
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Altitude: 150 m |
Start Year: -25278 AD
End Year: 1950 AD
Data: Please Cite Data Contributors!
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Summary: Models and palaeoclimate data suggest that the tropical Pacific
climate system plays a key part in the mechanisms underlying
orbital-scale and abrupt climate change. Atmospheric convection
over the western tropical Pacific is a major source of heat and
moisture to extratropical regions, and may therefore influence
the global climate response to a variety of forcing factors.
The response of tropical Pacific convection to changes in global
climate boundary conditions, abrupt climate changes and radiative
forcing remains uncertain, however. Here we present three
absolutely-dated oxygen isotope records from stalagmites in
northern Borneo that reflect changes in west Pacific warm pool
hydrology over the past 27,000 years. Our results suggest that
convection over the western tropical Pacific weakened 18,000-
20,000 years ago, as tropical Pacific and Antarctic temperatures
began to rise during the early stages of deglaciation.
Convective activity, as inferred from oxygen isotopes, reached a
minimum during Heinrich event 1, when the Atlantic meridional
overturning circulation was weak, pointing to feedbacks between
the strength of the overturning circulation and tropical Pacific
hydrology. There is no evidence of the Younger Dryas event in the
stalagmite records, however, suggesting that different mechanisms
operated during these two abrupt deglacial climate events.
During the Holocene epoch, convective activity appears to track
changes in spring and autumn insolation, highlighting the
sensitivity of tropical Pacific convection to external radiative
forcing. Together, these findings demonstrate that the tropical
Pacific hydrological cycle is sensitive to high-latitude climate
processes in both hemispheres, as well as to external radiative
forcing, and that it may have a central role in abrupt climate
change events. More Info on Speleothems |
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