Reconstruction of the variability of the southwest monsoon during the past 3 ka, from the continental margin of the southeastern Arabian Sea

From temporal variation in δ18O in Globigerinoidesruber and G. sacculifer and geochemical indices of weathering/erosion (chemical index of alteration, Al and Ti), we infer rapid southwest monsoon (SWM) deterioration with dwindling fluvial and detrital fluxes at ca. 450–650, 1000 and 1800–2200 cal. a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chauhan, Onkar S., Vogelsang, Elke, Basavaiah, N., Kader, U. Syed Abdul
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://14.139.123.141:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/558
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Summary:From temporal variation in δ18O in Globigerinoidesruber and G. sacculifer and geochemical indices of weathering/erosion (chemical index of alteration, Al and Ti), we infer rapid southwest monsoon (SWM) deterioration with dwindling fluvial and detrital fluxes at ca. 450–650, 1000 and 1800–2200 cal. a BP during the late Holocene. We have evaluated the role of solar influx (reconstructed) and high-latitude climate variability (archived in GRIP and GISP-2 cores) on SWM precipitation. Broadly, our δ18O climate reconstruction is concordant with GRIP and GISP-2, and supports a teleconnection through atmospheric connection between the SWM and the North Atlantic climate – albeit temporal extents of the Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period from high latitude are not entirely coeval. Moreover, there is a humid climate and enhanced precipitation during the terminal stages of the Little Ice Age. The medieval warming (ca. AD 800–1300) is not synchronous either, and is punctuated by an arid event centred at 1000 a BP. Although the delineation of the specific influence of solar influx on SWM precipitation is elusive, we surmise that SWM precipitation is a complex phenomenon and local orography along southwestern India may have a role on the entrapment of moisture from the southwest trade winds, when these hit land.