Low-latitude forcing of meridional temperature and salinity gradients in the subpolar North Atlantic and the growth of glacial ice sheets

Sea-surface temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS) records obtained from two deep-sea cores have been used to reconstruct meridional gradients in the mid-latitude North Atlantic over the past 40 k.y. During the buildup of ice sheets toward the last glacial maximum, SST and SSS gradients between 40 deg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chapman, MR, Maslin, MA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: GEOLOGICAL SOC AMERICA, INC 1999
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Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/138790/
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Summary:Sea-surface temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS) records obtained from two deep-sea cores have been used to reconstruct meridional gradients in the mid-latitude North Atlantic over the past 40 k.y. During the buildup of ice sheets toward the last glacial maximum, SST and SSS gradients between 40 degrees and 50 degrees N increased by 6-8 degrees C and similar to 2 parts per thousand, respectively. This trend represents a two-fold increase in surface-water gradients between 40 and: 20 ka and strongly overprints the signal of high-frequency climatic oscillations, We attribute the gradual intensification of meridional SST and SSS gradients to a precession-driven increase in advection within the glacial North Atlantic Current resulting from changes in low-latitude insolation and seasonality. A strongly zonal ocean circulation pattern, maintained by greater advection and enhanced heat storage within the subtropical ocean at the last glacial maximum, persisted until ca. 20 ka, when a decrease in glacial SST gradients, coincident with a reduction in low-latitude climate forcing, marked the initiation of the last deglaciation.