Migration of the subtropical front as a modulator of glacial climate

Ice cores extracted from the Antarctic ice sheet suggest that glacial conditions, and the relationship between isotopically derived temperatures and atmospheric PCO₂ have been constant over the last 800,000 years of the Late Pleistocene epoch. But independent lines of evidence, such as the extent of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature
Main Authors: Bard, E, Rickaby, R
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/nature08189
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:abccbc68-409c-4916-8213-820faf35686c
Description
Summary:Ice cores extracted from the Antarctic ice sheet suggest that glacial conditions, and the relationship between isotopically derived temperatures and atmospheric PCO₂ have been constant over the last 800,000 years of the Late Pleistocene epoch. But independent lines of evidence, such as the extent of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, sea level and other temperature record, point towards a fluctuating severity of glacial periods, particularly during the more extreme glacial stadials centred around 340,000 and 420,000 years ago (marine isotope stages 10 and 12). Previously unidentified mechanisms therefore appear to have mediated the relationship between insolation, CO₂ and climate. Here we test whether northward migration of the subtropical front (STF) off the southeastern coast of South Africa acts as a gatekeeper for the Agulhas current, which controls the transport of heat and salt from the Indo-Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean. Using a new 800,000-year record of sea surface temperature and ocean productivity from ocean sediment core MD962077, we demonstrate that during cold stadials (particularly marine isotope stages 10 and 12), productivity peaked and sea surface temperature was up to 6°C cooler than modern temperatures. This suggests that during these cooler stadials, the STF moved northward by up to 7° latitude, nearly shutting off the Agulhas current. Our results, combined with faunal assemblages from the south Atlantic show that variable northwards migration of the Southern Hemisphere STF can modulate the severity of each glacial period by altering the strength of the Agulhas current carrying heat and salt to the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. We show hence that the degree of northwards migration of the STF can partially decouple global climate from atmospheric partial pressure of carbon dioxide, PCO₂, and help to resolve the long-standing puzzle of differing glacial amplitudes within a consistent range of atmospheric PCO₂.