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Southern Hemisphere control on Australian monsoon variability during the late deglaciation and Holocene

Authors :
Manfred Mudelsee
Patrick De Deckker
Ursula Röhl
Wolfgang Kuhnt
Ann Holbourn
Bradley N. Opdyke
Jian Xu
Source :
Nature Communications (2041-1723) (Nature Publishing Group), 2015-01, Vol. 6, N. 5916, P. 1-7
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The evolution of the Australian monsoon in relation to high-latitude temperature fluctuations over the last termination remains highly enigmatic. Here we integrate high-resolution riverine runoff and dust proxy data from X-ray fluorescence scanner measurements in four well-dated sediment cores, forming a NE-SW transect across the Timor Sea. Our records reveal that the development of the Australian monsoon closely followed the deglacial warming history of Antarctica. A minimum in riverine runoff documents dry conditions throughout the region during the Antarctic Cold Reversal (15-12.9 ka). Massive intensification of the monsoon coincided with Southern Hemisphere warming and intensified greenhouse forcing over Australia during the atmospheric CO2 rise at 12.9-10 ka. We relate the earlier onset of the monsoon in the Timor Strait (13.4 ka) to regional changes in landmass exposure during deglacial sea-level rise. A return to dryer conditions occurred between 8.1 and 7.3 ka following the early Holocene runoff maximum.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2ce855bec48155f210b06c9c07a3f19a