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Southern Ocean convection amplified past Antarctic warming and atmospheric CO 2 rise during Heinrich Stadial 4

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Broadfield, Lauren 

Abstract

Abstract: The record of past climate highlights recurrent and intense millennial anomalies, characterised by a distinct pattern of inter-polar temperature change, termed the ‘thermal bipolar seesaw’, which is widely believed to arise from rapid changes in the Atlantic overturning circulation. By forcing a suppression of North Atlantic convection, models have been able to reproduce many of the general features of the thermal bipolar seesaw; however, they typically fail to capture the full magnitude of temperature change reconstructed using polar ice cores from both hemispheres. Here we use deep-water temperature reconstructions, combined with parallel oxygenation and radiocarbon ventilation records, to demonstrate the occurrence of enhanced deep convection in the Southern Ocean across the particularly intense millennial climate anomaly, Heinrich Stadial 4. Our results underline the important role of Southern Ocean convection as a potential amplifier of Antarctic warming, and atmospheric CO2 rise, that is responsive to triggers originating in the North Atlantic.

Description

Keywords

Article, /704/106/2738, /704/106/47/4113, /704/106/413, article

Journal Title

Communications Earth & Environment

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2662-4435

Volume Title

1

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK
Sponsorship
RCUK | Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) (NE/J010545/1)
Department of Education and Training | Australian Research Council (ARC) (FT180100606)
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) (GO 2294/2-1)