Back to Search Start Over

Tropical Atlantic Cooling and Freshening in the Middle of the Last Interglacial From Coral Proxy Records

Authors :
Manfred Mudelsee
William M Brocas
Thomas Felis
Source :
EPIC3Geophysical Research Letters, Wiley, 46(14), pp. 8289-8299, ISSN: 0094-8276
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2019.

Abstract

The last interglacial (LIG; Marine Isotope Substage 5e, ~127–117 ka) experienced globally warmer than modern temperatures; however, profound differences in regional climate occurred that are relevant to the assessment of future climate change scenarios. Tropical Atlantic sea surface temperature (SST) and hydrology are intrinsic to the spatiotemporal evolution of past and future climate. We present eight monthly resolved coral Sr/Ca and δ18O records (130–118 ka) to reconstruct mean western tropical Atlantic SST and seawater δ18O changes during the LIG. Cooler and fresher than modern surface waters are indicated for the middle of the LIG at ~126 ka. This was followed by a rapid transition to modern‐like SSTs and salinities that characterized the remaining part of the LIG. Our results, which account for differences found among corals, proxies, and SST calibration uncertainties, agree with western tropical Atlantic sediment records. Together, they suggest that an oceanic regime existed that differed from today.

Details

ISSN :
19448007 and 00948276
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geophysical Research Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bfc184d79f735986929f1b57cf7b910a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019gl083094