Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece

A new record combining isotopic and palynological results over the interval 133-111 ka BP at 100-200 year resolution from a long lacustrine sequence at Ioannina, northwest Greece, is presented. The sequence provides an opportunity to examine the nature of climate variability during the Last Intergla...

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Main Authors: Tzedakis, PC, Frogley, MR, Heaton, THE
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/125828/
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:125828
record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:125828 2023-05-15T17:29:21+02:00 Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece Tzedakis, PC Frogley, MR Heaton, THE 2003-04 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/125828/ unknown ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV In: GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE. (pp. 157 - 170). ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV (2003) Last Interglacial pollen stable isotopes southern Europe palaeoclimate OCEAN CIRCULATION LAKE PAMVOTIS DEEP-OCEAN ICE CORES HEAT-FLUX ATLANTIC CLIMATE PERIOD LONG RECORDS Proceedings paper 2003 ftucl 2016-01-15T03:05:25Z A new record combining isotopic and palynological results over the interval 133-111 ka BP at 100-200 year resolution from a long lacustrine sequence at Ioannina, northwest Greece, is presented. The sequence provides an opportunity to examine the nature of climate variability during the Last Interglacial in southern Europe where information has hitherto been relatively limited. The record shows that the frequency and amplitude of changes during the transitional late glacial and late interglacial phases were markedly higher than that of the full interglacial interval. These differences are probably a reflection of the relative size of ice sheets in the circum-North Atlantic and associated with ice-rafting events and climatic perturbations during these periods. During intervals of increased ice volume, it appears that North Atlantic variability has a significant downstream impact, dominating the climate signal in northwest Greece. During intervals of minimum ice volume, there may be a decoupling between the North Atlantic system and continental climates with other factors, such as insolation changes, becoming more important. The length of the Last Interglacial at Ioannina defined by the presence of forest is here estimated to be ca. 15 ka, in agreement with recent results from Portugal, but in conflict with estimates of ca. 10 ka for the duration of the Eemian in northwest Europe. In the absence of independent confirmation for these estimates, however, these differences and associated implications remain unresolved. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Report North Atlantic University College London: UCL Discovery
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
topic Last Interglacial
pollen
stable isotopes
southern Europe
palaeoclimate
OCEAN CIRCULATION
LAKE PAMVOTIS
DEEP-OCEAN
ICE CORES
HEAT-FLUX
ATLANTIC
CLIMATE
PERIOD
LONG
RECORDS
spellingShingle Last Interglacial
pollen
stable isotopes
southern Europe
palaeoclimate
OCEAN CIRCULATION
LAKE PAMVOTIS
DEEP-OCEAN
ICE CORES
HEAT-FLUX
ATLANTIC
CLIMATE
PERIOD
LONG
RECORDS
Tzedakis, PC
Frogley, MR
Heaton, THE
Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
topic_facet Last Interglacial
pollen
stable isotopes
southern Europe
palaeoclimate
OCEAN CIRCULATION
LAKE PAMVOTIS
DEEP-OCEAN
ICE CORES
HEAT-FLUX
ATLANTIC
CLIMATE
PERIOD
LONG
RECORDS
description A new record combining isotopic and palynological results over the interval 133-111 ka BP at 100-200 year resolution from a long lacustrine sequence at Ioannina, northwest Greece, is presented. The sequence provides an opportunity to examine the nature of climate variability during the Last Interglacial in southern Europe where information has hitherto been relatively limited. The record shows that the frequency and amplitude of changes during the transitional late glacial and late interglacial phases were markedly higher than that of the full interglacial interval. These differences are probably a reflection of the relative size of ice sheets in the circum-North Atlantic and associated with ice-rafting events and climatic perturbations during these periods. During intervals of increased ice volume, it appears that North Atlantic variability has a significant downstream impact, dominating the climate signal in northwest Greece. During intervals of minimum ice volume, there may be a decoupling between the North Atlantic system and continental climates with other factors, such as insolation changes, becoming more important. The length of the Last Interglacial at Ioannina defined by the presence of forest is here estimated to be ca. 15 ka, in agreement with recent results from Portugal, but in conflict with estimates of ca. 10 ka for the duration of the Eemian in northwest Europe. In the absence of independent confirmation for these estimates, however, these differences and associated implications remain unresolved. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
format Report
author Tzedakis, PC
Frogley, MR
Heaton, THE
author_facet Tzedakis, PC
Frogley, MR
Heaton, THE
author_sort Tzedakis, PC
title Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
title_short Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
title_full Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
title_fullStr Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
title_full_unstemmed Last Interglacial conditions in southern Europe: evidence from Ioannina, northwest Greece
title_sort last interglacial conditions in southern europe: evidence from ioannina, northwest greece
publisher ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
publishDate 2003
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/125828/
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source In: GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE. (pp. 157 - 170). ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV (2003)
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