Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal

Hydrography of the Bay of Bengal is highly influenced by the river runoff and rainfall during the southwest monsoon. We have reconstructed delta sup(18)Osw, sea surface salinity and sea surface temperature (SST) changes in the Bay of Bengal by using paired measurements of delta sup(18)O and Mg/Ca in...

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Main Authors: Govil, P., Naidu, P.D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3991
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author Govil, P.
Naidu, P.D.
author_facet Govil, P.
Naidu, P.D.
author_sort Govil, P.
collection National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio)
description Hydrography of the Bay of Bengal is highly influenced by the river runoff and rainfall during the southwest monsoon. We have reconstructed delta sup(18)Osw, sea surface salinity and sea surface temperature (SST) changes in the Bay of Bengal by using paired measurements of delta sup(18)O and Mg/Ca in a planktonic foraminifera species Globigerinoides ruber from core SK218/1 in the western Bay of Bengal in order to understand the rainfall variability associated with southwest monsoon over the past 32 kyr. Our SST reconstructions reveal that Bay of Bengal was approx 3.2 degrees C cooler during the LGM as compared to present day temperature and a approx 3.5 degrees C rise in SST is documented from 17 to 10 ka. Both SST and delta sup(18)Osw exhibit greater amplitude fluctuations during MIS 2 which is attributable to the variability of NE monsoon rainfall and associated river discharge into the Bay of Bengal in association with strong seasonal temperature contrast. On set of strengthening phase of SW monsoon was started during Bolling/Allerod as evidenced by the low delta sup(18)Osw values approx 14.7 ka. delta sup(18)Osw show consistently lower values during Holocene (with an exception around 5 ka), which suggests that the freshening of Bay of Bengal due to heavy precipitation and river discharge caused by strong SW monsoon. Results of this study signify that the maximum fluctuations of the NE monsoon rainfall during MIS 2 appear to be controlled by the strong seasonality and boundary conditions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Planktonic foraminifera
genre_facet Planktonic foraminifera
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
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language English
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op_relation Quat_Sci_Rev_30_3871.jpg
op_rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2011] Elsevier
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spelling ftnio:oai:dsr.nio.org:2264/3991 2025-01-17T00:21:45+00:00 Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal Govil, P. Naidu, P.D. 2011 http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3991 en eng Elsevier Quat_Sci_Rev_30_3871.jpg An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2011] Elsevier palaeoclimate temporal variations Globigerinoides ruber hydrography Journal Article 2011 ftnio 2012-08-25T20:10:21Z Hydrography of the Bay of Bengal is highly influenced by the river runoff and rainfall during the southwest monsoon. We have reconstructed delta sup(18)Osw, sea surface salinity and sea surface temperature (SST) changes in the Bay of Bengal by using paired measurements of delta sup(18)O and Mg/Ca in a planktonic foraminifera species Globigerinoides ruber from core SK218/1 in the western Bay of Bengal in order to understand the rainfall variability associated with southwest monsoon over the past 32 kyr. Our SST reconstructions reveal that Bay of Bengal was approx 3.2 degrees C cooler during the LGM as compared to present day temperature and a approx 3.5 degrees C rise in SST is documented from 17 to 10 ka. Both SST and delta sup(18)Osw exhibit greater amplitude fluctuations during MIS 2 which is attributable to the variability of NE monsoon rainfall and associated river discharge into the Bay of Bengal in association with strong seasonal temperature contrast. On set of strengthening phase of SW monsoon was started during Bolling/Allerod as evidenced by the low delta sup(18)Osw values approx 14.7 ka. delta sup(18)Osw show consistently lower values during Holocene (with an exception around 5 ka), which suggests that the freshening of Bay of Bengal due to heavy precipitation and river discharge caused by strong SW monsoon. Results of this study signify that the maximum fluctuations of the NE monsoon rainfall during MIS 2 appear to be controlled by the strong seasonality and boundary conditions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Planktonic foraminifera National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio) Indian
spellingShingle palaeoclimate
temporal variations
Globigerinoides ruber
hydrography
Govil, P.
Naidu, P.D.
Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title_full Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title_fullStr Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title_full_unstemmed Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title_short Variations of Indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the Western Bay of Bengal
title_sort variations of indian monsoon precipitation during the last 32 kyr reflected in the surface hydrography of the western bay of bengal
topic palaeoclimate
temporal variations
Globigerinoides ruber
hydrography
topic_facet palaeoclimate
temporal variations
Globigerinoides ruber
hydrography
url http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3991