Could meltwater pulses have been sneaked unnoticed into the deep ocean during the last glacial?
The lack of climatic imprint l eft by t he Meltwa t er Pulse-1A ( ’ 14.5 ka BP), equivalent to a sea-level rise of 14 to 20 meters, is puzzling . Recent studies sugge st the event might have occurre d as a hyperpycnal flow i n t he Gulf of Me xico, preve nting its detection in oc eanic records thr...
Published in: | Geophysical Research Letters |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2007
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/129625 https://doi.org/10.1029/2007GL032064 |
Summary: | The lack of climatic imprint l eft by t he Meltwa t er Pulse-1A ( ’ 14.5 ka BP), equivalent to a sea-level rise of 14 to 20 meters, is puzzling . Recent studies sugge st the event might have occurre d as a hyperpycnal flow i n t he Gulf of Me xico, preve nting its detection in oc eanic records throughout the North Atlantic. We present a suite of simula tions with the LOVECLIM climate model, which mimic th e e ffect of h yperp ycnal f low u nder LGM conditions, in a first attempt to constrain its climatic effects. Analysing the ocean dynamics associated with the anomalous freshwater input, we show that the proposed mechanism is capable of sneaking a signif i cant propo rtion of the MWP into the ocean ( ’ 6 meters equivalent sea-level rise using our model under LGM boundary cond itions). We also de monstrate t hat, in our model, the meridional circulati on i s more sensitive t o such inputs i n t he Arctic Ocean than in the Gulf of Mexico. |
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