Chinese stalagmite d18O controlled by changes in the Indian Monsoon during a simulated Heinrich event

Cave deposits from India and China have been widely used to inferpast strength of the Indian and East Asian summer monsoons, as the isotopiccomposition of oxygen (d18O) in stalagmites is primarily controlled by thed18O of precipitation. These stalagmites show spatially and temporally coherent variab...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Geoscience
Main Authors: PAUSATA Francesco, BATTISTI David S., NISANCIOGLU Kerim H., BITZ Cecilia M.
Language:English
Published: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC64992
https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1169
Description
Summary:Cave deposits from India and China have been widely used to inferpast strength of the Indian and East Asian summer monsoons, as the isotopiccomposition of oxygen (d18O) in stalagmites is primarily controlled by thed18O of precipitation. These stalagmites show spatially and temporally coherent variability in oxygen isotopes throughout the ice age. Here we use a climate model with an embedded module for oxygen isotopes to show that a sudden increase in North Atlantic sea ice extent during the last glacial period cools the Northern Hemisphere, reduces precipitation over the Indian basin and weakens the Indian monsoon. In turn, the precipitation weighted d18O (d18Op) is increased over India and isotopically heavier vapor is exported to China. The model broadly reproduces the proxy evidence of abrupt climate changes associated with an archetypal Heinrich event and the abrupt changes in d18Op seen in stalagmites across China, which are tape recorders for the strength of the Indian monsoon and not the East Asian monsoon, as previously thought. Our study also provides insight on Dansgaard-Oeschger events and precessional cycle variations seen in these cave records. JRC.H.2 - Climate change and air quality