Litcius/Paper detail

Fast and slow components of interstadial warming in the North Atlantic during the last glacial

Vasiliki Margari, Luke C Skinner, Laurie Menviel, Émilie Capron, Rachael H. Rhodes, Maryline J. Vautravers, Mohamed M. Ezat, Belén Martrat, Joan O. Grimalt, David A Hodell, Polychronis C. Tzedakis

2020Communications Earth & Environment28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The abrupt nature of warming events recorded in Greenland ice-cores during the last glacial has generated much debate over their underlying mechanisms. Here, we present joint marine and terrestrial analyses from the Portuguese Margin, showing a succession of cold stadials and warm interstadials over the interval 35–57 ka. Heinrich stadials 4 and 5 contain considerable structure, with a short transitional phase leading to an interval of maximum cooling and aridity, followed by slowly increasing sea-surface temperatures and moisture availability. A climate model experiment reproduces the changes in western Iberia during the final part of Heinrich stadial 4 as a result of the gradual recovery of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. What emerges is that Greenland ice-core records do not provide a unique template for warming events, which involved the operation of both fast and slow components of the coupled atmosphere–ocean–sea-ice system, producing adjustments over a range of timescales.

Topics & Concepts

StadialGlacial periodOceanographyGeologyPhysical geographyClimatologyGeographyPaleontologyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologyAeolian processes and effects