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Orbital- and millennial-scale Antarctic Circumpolar Current variability in Drake Passage over the past 140,000 years

Authors :
Wenshen Xiao
H. Christian Hass
Frank Lamy
Lester Lembke-Jene
Xu Zhang
Jürgen Titschack
Helge W Arz
Bernhard Diekmann
Shuzhuang Wu
Dirk Nürnberg
Gerhard Kuhn
Ralf Tiedemann
Levin Dumm
Jiabo Liu
Xufeng Zheng
Norbert R. Nowaczyk
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2021.

Abstract

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) plays a crucial role in global ocean circulation by fostering deep-water upwelling and formation of new water masses. On geological time-scales, ACC variations are poorly constrained beyond the last glacial. Here, we reconstruct changes in ACC strength in the central Drake Passage in vicinity of the modern Polar Front over a complete glacial-interglacial cycle (i.e., the past 140,000 years), based on sediment grain-size and geochemical characteristics. We found significant glacial-interglacial changes of ACC flow speed, with weakened current strength during glacials and a stronger circulation in interglacials. Superimposed on these orbital-scale changes are high-amplitude millennial-scale fluctuations, with ACC strength maxima correlating with diatom-based Antarctic winter sea-ice minima, particularly during full glacial conditions. We infer that the ACC is closely linked to Southern Hemisphere millennial-scale climate oscillations, amplified through Antarctic sea ice extent changes. These strong ACC variations modulated Pacific-Atlantic water exchange via the “cold water route” and potentially affected the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and marine carbon storage.<br />How the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) changed on glacial-interglacial time scales is not well known. Here, the authors present a 140,000 year long sediment record from the Drake passage and show both glacial-interglacial as well as millennial-scale variability which are linked to Atlantic variability and marine carbon storage.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a0a339d2dd04ace8c639092c951fd03a