Correlation between Vegetation in Southwestern Africa and Oceanic Upwelling in the Past 21,000 Years

2000 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ning Shi ◽  
Lydie M. Dupont ◽  
Hans-Jürgen Beug ◽  
Ralph Schneider

Dinoflagellate cyst and pollen records from marine sediments off the southwestern African coast reveal three major aridification periods since the last glaciation and an environmental correlation between land and sea. Abundant pollen of desert, semi-desert, and temperate plants 21,000–17,500 cal yr B.P. show arid and cold conditions in southwestern Africa that correspond to low sea surface temperatures and enhanced upwelling shown by dinoflagellate cysts. Occurrence of Restionaceae in the pollen record suggests northward movement of the winter-rain regime that influenced the study area during the last glacial maximum. Decline of Asteroideae, Restionaceae, and Ericaceae in the pollen record shows that temperate vegetation migrated out of the study area about 17,500 cal yr B.P., probably because of warming during the last deglaciation. The warming in southwestern Africa was associated with weakened upwelling and increased sea surface temperatures, 2000–2800 years earlier than in the Northern Hemisphere. Aridification 14,300–12,600 cal yr B.P. is characterized by a prominent increase of desert and semi-desert pollen without the return of temperate vegetation. This aridification corresponds to enhanced upwelling off Namibia and cooler temperatures in Antarctica, and it might have been influenced by oceanic thermohaline circulation. Aridification 11,000–8900 cal yr B.P. is out of phase with the northern African climate. Reduction of the water vapor supply in southwestern Africa at that time may be related to northward excursions of the Intertropical Convergence Zone.

2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 619-632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiming V. Wang ◽  
Guillaume Leduc ◽  
Marcus Regenberg ◽  
Nils Andersen ◽  
Thomas Larsen ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Saher ◽  
S. J. A. Jung ◽  
H. Elderfield ◽  
M. J. Greaves ◽  
D. Kroon

1985 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Rind ◽  
D. Peteet

CLIMAP (1981, “Seasonal Reconstruction of the Earth's Surface at the Last Glacial Maximum,” Geological Society of America Map and Chart Series MC-36) boundary conditions were used as inputs to the GISS general circulation model, and the last glacial maximum (LGM) climate was simulated for six model years. The simulation was compared with snow line depression and pollen-inferred temperature data at low latitudes, specifically for Hawaii, Colombia, East Africa, and New Guinea. The model does not produced as much cooling at low latitudes as is implied by the terrestrial evidence. An alternative experiment in which the CLIMAP sea-surface temperatures were uniformly lowered by 2°C produces a better fit to the land data although in Hawaii model temperatures are still too warm. The relatively warm CLIMAP tropical sea-surface temperatures also provide for only a slight decrease in the hydrologic cycle in the model, in contrast to both evidence of LGM tropical aridity and the results of the experiment with colder ocean temperatures. With the CLIMAP sea-surface temperatures, the LGM global annual mean surface air temperature is 3.6°C colder than at present; if the ocean temperatures were allowed to cool in conformity with the model's radiation balance, the LGM simulation would be 5°–6°C colder than today, and in better agreement with the tropical land evidence.


2000 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. T. Barrows ◽  
S. Juggins ◽  
P. De Deckker ◽  
J. Thiede ◽  
J. I. Martinez

1995 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 343-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Ramstein ◽  
S. Joussaume

For the Last Glacial Maximum, (LGM; 21 000 BP), simulations using atmospheric general-circulation models (AGCMs) are very sensitive to the prescribed boundary conditions. Most of the recent numerical experiments have used the CLIMAP (1981) data set for ice-sheet topography, sea-ice extent and sea surface temperatures (SSTs). To demonstrate the impact of ice-sheet reconstruction on the LGM climate, we performed two simulations: one using CLIMAP (1981) ice-sheet topography, the other using the new reconstruction provided by Peltier. We show that, although the geographical structure of the annually averaged temperature is not modified, there are important seasonal and regional impacts on the temperature distribution. In a second step, to analyze the effects of cooler SSTs and sea-ice extent, we performed a simulation using CLIMAP (1981) for the ice-sheet topography, but with present SSTs. We find that the cooling due to ice sheets for the LGM climate is one-third of the global annually averaged cooling, and dial the southward shift of the North Atlantic low in winter is not due to sea-ice extent, but is an orographic effect due to the Laurenride ice sheet. This set of sensitivity experiments allows us also to discriminate between thermal and orographic forcings and to show the impact of the ice-sheet topography and cooler SSTs on the pattern of planetary waves during the LGM climate.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather Andres ◽  
Lev Tarasov

<p>One of the main contributors to palaeoclimate variability on millennial timescales is understood to be Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) cycles. Our awareness of these phenomena arises primarily from quasi-periodic, abrupt transitions of large magnitude detected in δ<sup>18</sup>O records from Greenland ice cores (e.g. Dansgaard et al, 1982; Johnsen et al, 1992), although there is evidence of similar variability in other archives and regions. D-O cycles have plenty to capture the imagination:</p><ul><li> <p>the strength and rapidity of climate changes over Greenland,</p> </li> <li> <p>their regularity throughout MIS3 (~60 to 30 thousand years before present) and occurrence during the last deglaciation contrasting with their relative absence during the Last Glacial Maximum and Holocene,</p> </li> <li> <p>their opposed characteristics in Greenland and Antarctica,</p> </li> <li> <p>and that different models require different boundary conditions to reproduce this phenomena, if they can reproduce it at all.</p> </li> </ul><p> </p><p>This talk characterises D-Olike cycles in two different models: Planet Simulator (PlaSim, an Earth System Model with simplified atmospheric physics, thermodynamic sea ice, and simplified ocean dynamics), and COSMOS (a CMIP3-era ESM). We identify four phases to D-O cycles and commonalities and differences in their representations in these models. Finally, we examine which phases of this type of variability continue to contribute to climate variability today and what that looks like.</p>


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