Authors
Frank Lamy, Jérôme Kaiser, Helge W Arz, Dierk Hebbeln, Ulysses Ninnemann, Oliver Timm, Axel Timmermann, J Robert Toggweiler
Publication date
2007/7/30
Journal
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume
259
Issue
3-4
Pages
400-413
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The termination of the last ice age (Termination 1; T1) is crucial for our understanding of global climate change and for the validation of climate models. There are still a number of open questions regarding for example the exact timing and the mechanisms involved in the initiation of deglaciation and the subsequent interhemispheric pattern of the warming. Our study is based on a well-dated and high-resolution alkenone-based sea surface temperature (SST) record from the SE-Pacific off southern Chile (Ocean Drilling Project Site 1233) showing that deglacial warming at the northern margin of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current system (ACC) began shortly after 19,000 years BP (19 kyr BP). The timing is largely consistent with Antarctic ice-core records but the initial warming in the SE-Pacific is more abrupt suggesting a direct and immediate response to the slowdown of the Atlantic thermohaline circulation through the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
F Lamy, J Kaiser, HW Arz, D Hebbeln, U Ninnemann… - Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2007