Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America

Comparison between past changes in pollen assemblages and stable isotope ratios (deuterium and carbon) analyzed in the same peat core from Tierra del Fuego at latitude 55°S permitted identification of the relative contribution of precipitation versus temperature responsible for the respective change. Major steps in the sequence of paleoenvironmental changes, such as at 12700, 9000, 5000, and 4000 years ago are apparently related only to increase in precipitation, reflecting the latitudinal location and intensity of the westerly storm tracks. On the other hand, high paleoenvironmental variability, which is characteristic for the late-glacial and the latest Holocene, is related to temperature variability, which affects the relative moisture content. Comparison with other paleoenvironmental records suggests that the late-glacial temperature variability is probably related to variability in the extent of Antarctic sea-ice, which in turn appears to be related to the intensity of Atlantic deep-water circulation. Temperature variability during the latest Holocene, on the other hand, is probably related to the dynamics of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Markgraf, Vera, White, James W.C., Figge, Regina A., Kenny, Ray
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1995
Subjects:Atmospheric Sciences, Earth Sciences, Oceanography, PACLIM, palynology,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31530
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-315302021-07-09T03:14:52Z Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America Markgraf, Vera White, James W.C. Figge, Regina A. Kenny, Ray Atmospheric Sciences Earth Sciences Oceanography PACLIM palynology Comparison between past changes in pollen assemblages and stable isotope ratios (deuterium and carbon) analyzed in the same peat core from Tierra del Fuego at latitude 55°S permitted identification of the relative contribution of precipitation versus temperature responsible for the respective change. Major steps in the sequence of paleoenvironmental changes, such as at 12700, 9000, 5000, and 4000 years ago are apparently related only to increase in precipitation, reflecting the latitudinal location and intensity of the westerly storm tracks. On the other hand, high paleoenvironmental variability, which is characteristic for the late-glacial and the latest Holocene, is related to temperature variability, which affects the relative moisture content. Comparison with other paleoenvironmental records suggests that the late-glacial temperature variability is probably related to variability in the extent of Antarctic sea-ice, which in turn appears to be related to the intensity of Atlantic deep-water circulation. Temperature variability during the latest Holocene, on the other hand, is probably related to the dynamics of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation. 2021-06-24T17:11:32Z 2021-06-24T17:11:32Z 1995 conference_item http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31530 en application/pdf application/pdf 21-28 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/15716 8 2014-11-25 21:32:47 15716
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Atmospheric Sciences
Earth Sciences
Oceanography
PACLIM
palynology
Atmospheric Sciences
Earth Sciences
Oceanography
PACLIM
palynology
spellingShingle Atmospheric Sciences
Earth Sciences
Oceanography
PACLIM
palynology
Atmospheric Sciences
Earth Sciences
Oceanography
PACLIM
palynology
Markgraf, Vera
White, James W.C.
Figge, Regina A.
Kenny, Ray
Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
description Comparison between past changes in pollen assemblages and stable isotope ratios (deuterium and carbon) analyzed in the same peat core from Tierra del Fuego at latitude 55°S permitted identification of the relative contribution of precipitation versus temperature responsible for the respective change. Major steps in the sequence of paleoenvironmental changes, such as at 12700, 9000, 5000, and 4000 years ago are apparently related only to increase in precipitation, reflecting the latitudinal location and intensity of the westerly storm tracks. On the other hand, high paleoenvironmental variability, which is characteristic for the late-glacial and the latest Holocene, is related to temperature variability, which affects the relative moisture content. Comparison with other paleoenvironmental records suggests that the late-glacial temperature variability is probably related to variability in the extent of Antarctic sea-ice, which in turn appears to be related to the intensity of Atlantic deep-water circulation. Temperature variability during the latest Holocene, on the other hand, is probably related to the dynamics of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation.
format conference_item
topic_facet Atmospheric Sciences
Earth Sciences
Oceanography
PACLIM
palynology
author Markgraf, Vera
White, James W.C.
Figge, Regina A.
Kenny, Ray
author_facet Markgraf, Vera
White, James W.C.
Figge, Regina A.
Kenny, Ray
author_sort Markgraf, Vera
title Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
title_short Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
title_full Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
title_fullStr Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
title_full_unstemmed Multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost South America
title_sort multivariate climate reconstruction for the last 14,000 years in southernmost south america
publishDate 1995
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31530
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AT kennyray multivariateclimatereconstructionforthelast14000yearsinsouthernmostsouthamerica
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