Back to Search Start Over

40. Chronology and climate forcing of the last four interglacials

Authors :
Frank Sirocko
Martin Claussen
Thomas Litt
Maria Fernanda Sánchez Goñi
Andre Berger
Tatjana Boettger
Markus Diehl
Stéphanie Desprat
Barbara Delmonte
Detlev Degering
Manfred Frechen
Mebus A. Geyh
Matthias Groeger
Masa Kageyama
Frank Kaspar
Norbert Kühl
Claudia Kubatzki
Gerrit Lohmann
Marie-France Loutre
Ulrich Müller
Bert Rein
Wilfried Rosendahl
Katy Roucoux
Denis-Didier Rousseau
Klemens Seelos
Mark Siddall
Denis Scholz
Christoph Spötl
Brigitte Urban
Maryline Vautravers
Andrei Velichko
Stefan Wenzel
Martin Widmann
Bernd Wünnemann
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2007.

Abstract

Publisher Summary The last four interglacials (intervals during which global ice volume was similar to, or less than, that of our current warm stage) correspond to the warmest parts of the marine oxygen isotope stages marine isotopic age (MIS) 5, 7, 9, and 11. These interglacials followed the 100-kyr rhythm of eccentricity, but each had different insolation regimes, different durations, different ice volumes, and different sea-level heights. However, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations were similar and reached values, which, largely, were close to those of the current interglacial (Holocene or MIS 1) before the industrial revolution led to the artificial enrichment of the atmosphere's greenhouse gas concentrations via the burning of fossil fuels. This chapter summarizes the state of knowledge on each of the climatic warm intervals.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........47e92126761ed806a33d68d4a9fa115a