Strong links between Saharan dust fluxes, monsoon strength, and North Atlantic climate during the last 5000 years
Juncal A. Cruz, Frank McDermott, María Jesús Turrero Jiménez, R. Lawrence Edwards, Javier Martín‐Chivelet
Abstract
Sr) and karst modeling. The record reveals a long-term increase in Saharan dust flux, consistent with progressive North Africa aridification and strengthening of Northern Hemisphere latitudinal climatic gradients. On shorter, centennial to millennial scales, it shows broad variations in dust fluxes, in tune with North Atlantic ocean-atmosphere patterns and with monsoonal variability. Dust fluxes rapidly increase before (and peaks at) Late Holocene multidecadal- to century-scale cold climate events, including those around 4200, 2800, and 1500 years before present, suggesting the operation of previously unknown strong dust-climate negative feedbacks preceding these episodes.