North Atlantic paleoceanography: The last five million years
Author(s) -
Stein Ruediger,
Kanamatsu Toshiya,
AlvarezZarikian Carlos,
Higgins, Sean M.,
Channell Jim E. T.,
Aboud Essam,
Ohno Masao,
Acton Gary D.,
Akimoto Kazumi,
Bailey Ian,
Bjørklund Kjell R.,
Evans Helen,
Nielsen Simon H. H.,
Fang Nianqiao,
Ferretti Patrizia,
Gruetzner Jens,
Guyodo Yohan J.B.,
Hagino Kentaro,
Harris Robert,
Hatakeda Kentaro,
Hefter Jens,
Judge Shelley A.,
Kulbanek Denise K.,
Nanayama Futoshi,
Rashid Harunur,
Sierro Sanchez Francisco J.,
Voelker Antje,
Zhai Quimin
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
eos, transactions american geophysical union
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.316
H-Index - 86
eISSN - 2324-9250
pISSN - 0096-3941
DOI - 10.1029/2006eo130002
Subject(s) - north atlantic deep water , oceanography , geology , meltwater , ice sheet , thermohaline circulation , glacial period , ice sheet model , climatology , cryosphere , gulf stream , sea ice , antarctic sea ice , paleontology
In the North Atlantic, cold, relatively salty water sinks in the icy Labrador and Greenland seas, forming North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW).This circulates through the global ocean, driving ocean overturning and global heat transport and, thus, impacting global climate. As one of the most climatically sensitive regions on Earth, the North Atlantic has experienced abrupt changes to its oceanatmosphere‐cryosphere system, triggered by fluctuations in meltwater delivery to source areas of NADW formation. For about the past 100 thousand years, these abrupt jumps in climate state have manifested as ‘Dansgaard/Oeschger’ (D/O) oscillations (millennial‐scale warm‐cold oscillations) and 'Heinrich' events in ice and marine sediment cores, respectively [e.g., Dansgaard et al. , 1993; Bond and Lotti , 1995]. These Heinrich events are characterized as huge input of ice‐rafted debris (IRD) and meltwater pulses, documenting episodes of sudden instability and collapse of the current Greenland ice sheets and the Laurentide ice sheet, the latter of which covered northern North America several times during the Pleistocene Epoch.
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