Temporal relationships of carbon cycling and ocean circulation at glacial boundaries
- PMID: 15790848
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1104883
Temporal relationships of carbon cycling and ocean circulation at glacial boundaries
Abstract
Evidence from high-sedimentation-rate South Atlantic deep-sea cores indicates that global and Southern Ocean carbon budget shifts preceded thermohaline circulation changes during the last ice age initiation and termination and that these were preceded by ice-sheet growth and retreat, respectively. No consistent lead-lag relationships are observed during abrupt millennial warming events during the last ice age, allowing for the possibility that ocean circulation triggered some millenial climate changes. At the major glacial-interglacial transitions, the global carbon budget and thermohaline ocean circulation responded sequentially to the climate changes that forced the growth and decline of continental ice sheets.
Comment in
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Paleoclimate. Ocean flow amplified, not triggered, climate change.Science. 2005 Mar 25;307(5717):1854. doi: 10.1126/science.307.5717.1854a. Science. 2005. PMID: 15790817 No abstract available.
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