Regionally heterogeneous paleoenvironmental responses in the West African and South American monsoon systems on glacial to millennial timescales
Abstract
Although millennial-scale paleoenvironmental changes have been well characterized for high latitude sites, short-term climate variability in the tropics is less well understood. While the Intertropical Convergence Zone may act as an integrator of tropical climate changes, regional factors also play an important role in controlling the tropical response to climate forcing. Understanding these influences, and how they modulate the response to global climate forcing under different mean climate states is thus important for assessing how the tropics may respond to future climate change. Here, we examine new centennial-resolution records of paleoenvironmental change from isotopic and relative abundance data from molecular biomarkers in sediment cores from Lake Bosumtwi and Lake Titicaca. We assess the relative response of the West African and South American monsoon systems to millennial and suborbital-scale climate variability over the last ca. 30,000 years. While there is evidence for synchronous climate variability in the two systems, the dominant paleoenvironmental changes appear largely decoupled, highlighting the importance of regional climatology in controlling the response to climate forcing in tropical regions.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2008
- Bibcode:
- 2008AGUFMPP43B1533S
- Keywords:
-
- 1041 Stable isotope geochemistry (0454;
- 4870);
- 1055 Organic and biogenic geochemistry;
- 1605 Abrupt/rapid climate change (4901;
- 8408);
- 1616 Climate variability (1635;
- 3305;
- 3309;
- 4215;
- 4513);
- 1637 Regional climate change