Climatic drivers of deglacial SST variability in the Eastern Pacific

We explore the response of northeastern Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) to deglacial (similar to 16-7 ka) climate variability as recorded in U37K '-based SST reconstructions spanning 65 degrees N to 10 degrees S. Included in the analysis is a new 23 kyr SST record from core NH8P from the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Other Authors: Meegan Kumar, Dervla (author), Tierney, Jessica E. (author), Bhattacharya, Tripti (author), Zhu, Jiang (author), McCarty, Logan (author), Murray, James W. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2021PA004264
Description
Summary:We explore the response of northeastern Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) to deglacial (similar to 16-7 ka) climate variability as recorded in U37K '-based SST reconstructions spanning 65 degrees N to 10 degrees S. Included in the analysis is a new 23 kyr SST record from core NH8P from the northwest Mexican Margin. We isolate spatiotemporal patterns in regional SSTs with trend empirical orthogonal function (TEOF) analysis. The dominant TEOF mode reflects deglacial warming associated with rising pCO2. Tropical and subtropical SSTs correlated most strongly with this mode, suggesting that the thermodynamic response of the tropical eastern Pacific to greenhouse gas forcing was the dominant driver of regional SST change during deglaciation. The second TEOF mode reflects millennial-scale variability and is most strongly expressed in subpolar SSTs. The synchronous timing between North Pacific and North Atlantic SST oscillations is evidence for the rapid transmission of millennial-scale climate perturbations between the basins, likely through an atmospheric teleconnection. SSTs at NH8P have no correlation with either leading TEOF mode as there is minimal change in SST at this site after similar to 20 ka. A model simulation of the LGM indicates that glacial cooling was muted in much of the Eastern Pacific Warm Pool (EPWP), in which NH8P lies, due to reductions in latent heat flux. This suggests that the wind-evaporation-SST feedback was responsible for the attenuation of EPWP cooling. Overall, this study highlights the distinct latitudinal trends in the Pacific's response to deglaciation.