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Millennial‐scale variability to 735 ka: High‐resolution climate records from Santa Barbara Basin, CA
Author(s) -
White Sarah M.,
Hill Tessa M.,
Kennett James P.,
Behl Richard J.,
Nicholson Craig
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1002/palo.20022
Subject(s) - stadial , geology , glacial period , interglacial , paleontology , oceanography
Determining the ultimate cause and effect of millennial‐scale climate variability remains an outstanding problem in paleoceanography, partly due to the lack of high‐resolution records predating the last glaciation. Recent cores from Santa Barbara Basin provide ~2500–5700 year “windows” of climate with ~10–50 year resolution. Ages for three cores, determined by seismic stratigraphic correlation, oxygen isotope stratigraphy, and biostratigraphy, date to ~293 ka (MIS 8), ~450 ka (MIS 12), and ~735 ka (MIS 18). These records sample the Late Pleistocene, during which the 100 kyr cycle strengthened and the magnitude of glacial‐interglacial cyclicity increased. Thus, these records provide a test of the dependence of millennial‐scale behavior on variations in glacial‐interglacial cyclicity. The stable isotopic (δ 18 O) composition of planktonic foraminifera shows millennial‐scale variability in all three intervals, with similar characteristics (duration, cyclicity) to those previously documented during MIS 3 at this site. Stadial G. bulloides δ 18 O values are 2.75–1.75‰ (average 2.25‰) and interstadial values are 1.75–0.5‰ (average 1‰), with rapid (decadal‐scale) interstadial and stadial initiations of 1‐2‰, as in MIS 3. Interstadials lasted ~250–1600 years and occurred every ~650–1900 years. Stadial paleotemperatures were 3.5–9.5°C and interstadial paleotemperatures were 7.5–13°C. Upwelling, evidenced by planktonic foraminiferal assemblages and δ 13 C, increased during interstadials, similar to MIS 3; high productivity during some stadials was reminiscent of the Last Glacial Maximum. This study builds upon previous records in showing that millennial‐scale shifts were an inherent feature of Northern Hemisphere glacial climates since 735 ka, and they remained remarkably constant in the details of their amplitude, cyclicity, and temperature variability.

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