Millennial-scale climate variability in the subpolar North Atlantic Ocean during the late Pliocene

International audience Large-amplitude millennial-scale climate oscillations have been identified in late Pleistocene climate archives from around the world. These oscillations appear to be of larger amplitude during times of enlarged ice sheets. This observation suggests the existence of a relation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography
Main Authors: Bolton, Clara, Wilson, Paul A., Bailey, Ian, Friedrich, Oliver, Beer, Christopher J., Becker, Julia, Baranwal, Soma, Schiebel, Ralf
Other Authors: National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOC), University of Southampton, School of Earth and Ocean Sciences Cardiff, Cardiff University, Bio-Indicateurs Actuels et Fossiles (BIAF), Université d'Angers (UA)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01668006
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01668006/document
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01668006/file/Bolton%20et%20al.,%202010%20paleo1313.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1029/2010PA001951
Description
Summary:International audience Large-amplitude millennial-scale climate oscillations have been identified in late Pleistocene climate archives from around the world. These oscillations appear to be of larger amplitude during times of enlarged ice sheets. This observation suggests the existence of a relationship between large-amplitude millennial variations in climate and extreme glacial conditions and therefore that the emergence of millennial-scale climate variability may be linked to the Pliocene intensification of northern hemisphere glaciation (iNHG). Here we test this hypothesis using new late Pliocene high-resolution (∼400 year) records of ice-rafted debris deposition and stable isotopes in planktic foraminiferal calcite (Globigerinoides ruber) generated from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site U1313 in the subpolar North Atlantic (a reoccupation of the classic Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 607). Our records span marine oxygen isotope stages (MIS) 103–95 (∼2600 to 2400 ka), the first interval during iNHG (∼3.5 to 2.5 Ma) in which large-amplitude glacial-interglacial cycles and inferred sea level changes occur. Our records reveal small-amplitude variability at periodicities of ∼1.8 to 6.2 kyr that prevails regardless of (inter)glacial state with no significant amplification during the glacials MIS 100, 98, and 96. These findings imply that the threshold for the amplification of such variability to the proportions seen in the marine archive of the last glacial was not crossed during the late Pliocene and, in view of all available data, likely not until the Mid-Pleistocene Transition.