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Abrupt Ice Age Shifts in Southern Westerlies and Antarctic Climate Forced from the North

Authors :
Buizert, Christo
Sigl, Michael
Severi, Mirko
Markle, Bradley R.
Wettstein, Justin J.
McConnell, Joseph R.
Pedro, Joel B.
Sodemann, Harald
Goto-Azuma, Kumiko
Kawamura, Kenji
Fujita, Shuji
Motoyama, Hideaki
Hirabayashi, Motohiro
Uemura, Ryu
Stenni, Barbara
Parrenin, Frédéric
He, Feng
Fudge, T. J.
Steig, Eric J.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2018.

Abstract

The Southern Hemisphere (SH) mid-latitude westerly winds play a central role in the global climate system via Southern Ocean upwelling, carbon exchange with the deep ocean, Agulhas Leakage, and Antarctic ice sheet stability. Meridional shifts in the SH westerlies have been hypothesized in response to abrupt North Atlantic Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) climatic events of the last ice age, in parallel with the well-documented shifts of the intertropical convergence zone. Shifting moisture pathways to West Antarctica are consistent with this view, but may represent a Pacific teleconnection pattern. The full SH atmospheric-circulation response to the DO cycle, as well as its impact on Antarctic temperature, have so far remained unclear. Here we use five volcanically-synchronized ice cores to show that the Antarctic temperature response to the DO cycle can be understood as the superposition of two modes: a spatially homogeneous oceanic “bipolar seesaw” mode that lags Northern Hemisphere (NH) climate by about 200 years, and a spatially heterogeneous atmospheric mode that is synchronous with NH abrupt events. Temperature anomalies of the atmospheric mode are similar to those associated with present-day Southern Annular Mode (SAM) variability, rather than the Pacific South America (PSA) pattern. Moreover, deuterium excess records suggest a zonally coherent migration of the SH westerlies over all ocean basins in phase with NH climate. Our work provides a simple conceptual framework for understanding the circum-Antarctic temperature response to abrupt NH climate change. We provide observational evidence for abrupt shifts in the SH westerlies, with ramifications for global ocean circulation and atmospheric CO₂. These coupled changes highlight the necessity of a global, rather than a purely North Atlantic, perspective on the DO cycle.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1c601513e250309d07e04411b68624ba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.142480