The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis

The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the southwest Pacific are known to have waxed and waned numerous times during the last two glacial cycles, though even semi-continuous histories of the westerlies extend back no more than about 20,000 years. We have good evidence for at least three scales of eve...

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Main Authors: Schulmeister, J., Goodwin, I., Curran, M., Renwick, J., Harle, K., Armand, L., McGlone, M. S., Cook, E., Dodson, J., Hesse, P. P., Mayewski, P.
Other Authors: The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Science
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Pergamon 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/34530
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spelling ftunivnewcastnsw:uon:3571 2023-05-15T13:50:45+02:00 The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis Schulmeister, J. Goodwin, I. Curran, M. Renwick, J. Harle, K. Armand, L. McGlone, M. S. Cook, E. Dodson, J. Hesse, P. P. Mayewski, P. The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Science 2004 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/34530 eng eng Pergamon Quaternary International Vol. 118-119, p. 23-53 10.1016/S1040-6182(03)00129-0 westerlies Southern Hemisphere glacial ice age journal article 2004 ftunivnewcastnsw 2018-07-27T01:04:27Z The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the southwest Pacific are known to have waxed and waned numerous times during the last two glacial cycles, though even semi-continuous histories of the westerlies extend back no more than about 20,000 years. We have good evidence for at least three scales of events. A westerly maximum occurs at the Last Glacial Maximum. There is less conclusive evidence for another westerly maximum in the late Holocene and for a minimum at ca. 11 ka. It is too early to ascribe even a cycle to these data but there are grounds to suggest that Milankovitch precessional forcing may underlie the observed pattern. There is also a quasi-2600-year cycle present in Antarctic ice cores that appears to correlate to variation in westerly flow. There is strong centennial-scale variability. In historical times, the Little Ice Age (LIA: ca. 1400–1850) was associated with a poleward shift in the circumpolar trough in the Southern Ocean, strengthened westerly circulation over Tasmania and a strengthening of southwesterly circulation and neoglaciation in southern New Zealand, while the preceding period (800–1400 AD) was less certainly marked by reduced westerly flow. From modern records we know that decadal and inter-annual variability is important (e.g. Pacific Decadal Oscillation, High Latitude Mode also known as the Antarctic Oscillation, El Niño Southern Oscillation). Only a minority of the proxies examined can identify changes on these temporal scales but data from tree-rings, ice cores and laminated lake sediments do indicate systematic changes in these phenomena through time. Rossby wave patterns are shown to play a critical role in long duration events as well as at the synoptic scale. We conclude that westerly circulation is as strong now as at any time in the last glacial cycle. In addition, changes in latitudinal boundaries in the westerlies may be nearly as large in inter-annual zonal shifts (ca. 2° maximum) as in glaciation–interglaciation movements (ca. 3–4°). There is, however, reasonable evidence of strengthening/weakening across much of the westerly belt at westerly maxima/minima such as the LIA/early Holocene. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia) Antarctic New Zealand Pacific Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia)
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastnsw
language English
topic westerlies
Southern Hemisphere
glacial
ice age
spellingShingle westerlies
Southern Hemisphere
glacial
ice age
Schulmeister, J.
Goodwin, I.
Curran, M.
Renwick, J.
Harle, K.
Armand, L.
McGlone, M. S.
Cook, E.
Dodson, J.
Hesse, P. P.
Mayewski, P.
The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
topic_facet westerlies
Southern Hemisphere
glacial
ice age
description The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the southwest Pacific are known to have waxed and waned numerous times during the last two glacial cycles, though even semi-continuous histories of the westerlies extend back no more than about 20,000 years. We have good evidence for at least three scales of events. A westerly maximum occurs at the Last Glacial Maximum. There is less conclusive evidence for another westerly maximum in the late Holocene and for a minimum at ca. 11 ka. It is too early to ascribe even a cycle to these data but there are grounds to suggest that Milankovitch precessional forcing may underlie the observed pattern. There is also a quasi-2600-year cycle present in Antarctic ice cores that appears to correlate to variation in westerly flow. There is strong centennial-scale variability. In historical times, the Little Ice Age (LIA: ca. 1400–1850) was associated with a poleward shift in the circumpolar trough in the Southern Ocean, strengthened westerly circulation over Tasmania and a strengthening of southwesterly circulation and neoglaciation in southern New Zealand, while the preceding period (800–1400 AD) was less certainly marked by reduced westerly flow. From modern records we know that decadal and inter-annual variability is important (e.g. Pacific Decadal Oscillation, High Latitude Mode also known as the Antarctic Oscillation, El Niño Southern Oscillation). Only a minority of the proxies examined can identify changes on these temporal scales but data from tree-rings, ice cores and laminated lake sediments do indicate systematic changes in these phenomena through time. Rossby wave patterns are shown to play a critical role in long duration events as well as at the synoptic scale. We conclude that westerly circulation is as strong now as at any time in the last glacial cycle. In addition, changes in latitudinal boundaries in the westerlies may be nearly as large in inter-annual zonal shifts (ca. 2° maximum) as in glaciation–interglaciation movements (ca. 3–4°). There is, however, reasonable evidence of strengthening/weakening across much of the westerly belt at westerly maxima/minima such as the LIA/early Holocene.
author2 The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Science
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Schulmeister, J.
Goodwin, I.
Curran, M.
Renwick, J.
Harle, K.
Armand, L.
McGlone, M. S.
Cook, E.
Dodson, J.
Hesse, P. P.
Mayewski, P.
author_facet Schulmeister, J.
Goodwin, I.
Curran, M.
Renwick, J.
Harle, K.
Armand, L.
McGlone, M. S.
Cook, E.
Dodson, J.
Hesse, P. P.
Mayewski, P.
author_sort Schulmeister, J.
title The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
title_short The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
title_full The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
title_fullStr The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
title_full_unstemmed The Southern Hemisphere westerlies in the Australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
title_sort southern hemisphere westerlies in the australasian sector over the last glacial cycle: a synthesis
publisher Pergamon
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/34530
geographic Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
op_relation Quaternary International Vol. 118-119, p. 23-53
10.1016/S1040-6182(03)00129-0
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