Stalagmite-inferred centennial variability of the Asian summer monsoon in southwest China between 58 and 79 ka BP
Journal
Quaternary Science Reviews
Journal Volume
160
Pages
1-12
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Zhang, T.-T.
Li, T.-Y.
Cheng, H.
Edwards, R.L.
Spötl, Christoph
Han, L.-Y.
Li, J.-Y.
Huang, C.-X.
Abstract
We use a new spliced stalagmite oxygen isotope record from Yangkou Cave and, Chongqing, southwest China, to reconstruct the centennial-millennial-scale changes in Asian Summer Monsoon (ASM) intensity between 58.0 and 79.3 thousand years before present (ka BP, before AD 1950). This multidecadally resolved record shows four strong ASM periods, corresponding to Greenland Interstadials (GIS) 17–20, and three weak ASM episodes, starting at 61.5 ± 0.2 ka BP and ending at 59.4 ± 0.2 ka BP that may correlate with Heinrich Event 6. The close agreement of climate events between China and Greenland supports the notion that the ASM is dominantly governed by high-latitude forcings in the Northern Hemisphere. The short-lived interstadial GIS 18, however, lasted for over 3 kyr in the records derived from ASM region, reflecting a gradual decline of ASM intensity, which coincides with a millennial-scale warming trend in Antarctica. This suggests an additional forcing of the ASM by the Southern Hemisphere, which also affected GIS 8–12, H4 and H5, as shown by previous speleothem studies from the ASM region. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
SDGs
Other Subjects
Atmospheric thermodynamics; Asian summer monsoons; Centennial variability; Heinrich Events; Interstadials; Northern Hemispheres; Oxygen isotope records; Southern Hemisphere; Southwest China; Climate change; climate forcing; climate variation; decadal variation; Heinrich event; interstadial; monsoon; Northern Hemisphere; oxygen isotope; paleoclimate; Southern Hemisphere; speleothem; stalagmite; summer; Antarctica; Arctic; China; Chongqing; Greenland
Type
journal article