Relationship between Holocene climate variations over southern Greenland and eastern Baffin Island and synoptic circulation pattern

Lake pollen records from southwest Greenland and eastern Baffin Island show strong regionalism in climate trends of the last 7000 cal years. July surface air temperature reconstructions from pollen indicate larger amplitude cooling in southwest Greenland (>3.0°C) than in eastern Baffin Island (&l...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: B. Fréchette, A. de Vernal
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/5/347/2009/cp-5-347-2009.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/d3804d8730ba4a879935102841e6e5bf
Description
Summary:Lake pollen records from southwest Greenland and eastern Baffin Island show strong regionalism in climate trends of the last 7000 cal years. July surface air temperature reconstructions from pollen indicate larger amplitude cooling in southwest Greenland (>3.0°C) than in eastern Baffin Island (<1.0°C). This west-east gradient in climate change is consistent with August sea-surface temperature reconstructions from dinocyst records that indicate decreasing temperature and/or strength of the North Atlantic Current to the east during the Holocene while the eastern Canadian margins under the Labrador Current influence display slight warming. Complementary to air and sea-surface temperature records, the lake pollen data led to reconstruct increased cloudiness in southern Greenland, which points to increasing cyclonic activity since 7000 cal years BP west of Greenland. Together, the terrestrial and marine records of the northwest North Atlantic therefore suggest a shift from a dominant NAO+ during the early-mid Holocene to dominant NAO- in the late Holocene.