A 50,000-Year Record of Climate Oscillations from Florida and Its Temporal Correlation with the Heinrich Events
Abstract
Oscillations of Pinus (pine) pollen in a 50,000-year sequence from Lake Tulane, Florida, indicate that there were major vegetation shifts during the last glacial cycle. Episodes of abundant Pinus populations indicate a climate that was more wet than intervening phases dominated by Quercus (oak) and Ambrosia-type (ragweed and marsh-elder). The Pinus episodes seem to be temporally correlated with the North Atlantic Heinrich events, which were massive, periodic advances of ice streams from the eastern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Possible links between the Tulane Pinus and Heinrich events include hernispheric cooling, the influences of Mississippi meltwater on seasurface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico, and the effects of North Atlantic thermohaline circulation on currents in the Gulf.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- July 1993
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1993Sci...261..198G