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Variability of the western Mediterranean Sea surface temperature during the last 25,000 years and its connection with the Northern Hemisphere climatic changes
Author(s) -
Cacho Isabel,
Grimalt Joan O.,
Canals Miquel,
Sbaffi Laura,
Shackleton Nick J.,
Schönfeld Joachim,
Zahn Rainer
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2000pa000502
Subject(s) - geology , oceanography , polar front , sea surface temperature , climatology , alkenone , atlantic multidecadal oscillation , mediterranean climate , holocene , northern hemisphere , younger dryas , mediterranean sea , thermohaline circulation , front (military) , north atlantic oscillation , north atlantic deep water , geography , archaeology
Sea surface temperature (SST) profiles over the last 25 kyr derived from alkenone measurements are studied in four cores from a W‐E latitudinal transect encompassing the Gulf of Cadiz (Atlantic Ocean), the Alboran Sea, and the southern Tyrrhenian Sea (western Mediterranean). The results document the sensitivity of the Mediterranean region to the short climatic changes of the North Atlantic Ocean, particularly those involving the latitudinal position of the polar front. The amplitude of the SST oscillations increases toward the Tyrrhenian Sea, indicating an amplification effect of the Atlantic signal by the climatic regime of the Mediterranean region. All studied cores show a shorter cooling phase (700 years) for the Younger Dryas (YD) than that observed in the North Atlantic region (1200 years). This time diachroneity is related to an intra‐YD climatic change documented in the European continent. Minor oscillations in the southward displacement of the North Atlantic polar front may also have driven this early warming in the studied area. During the Holocene a regional diachroneity propagating west to east is observed for the SST maxima, 11.5–10.2 kyr B.P. in the Gulf of Cadiz, 10–9 kyr B.P. in the Alboran Sea, and 8.9–8.4 kyr B.P. in the Thyrrenian Sea. A general cooling trend from these SST maxima to present day is observed during this stage, which is marked by short cooling oscillations with a periodicity of 730±40 years and its harmonics.

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