Direct land/sea correlation of the Eemian, and its comparison with the Holocene: A high-resolution palynological record off the Iberian margin

54Citations
Citations of this article
66Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

High-resolution pollen, dinocyst and isotopic profiles covering the marine isotope stage 5 (MIS 5) are presented from core MD952042 (Tagus abyssal plain, 37°47'N, 10°09'W). Both marine and terrestrial proxies indicate the occurrence of a Bolling-Allerod-Younger Dryas-like event at the beginning of MI substage 5e. The terrestrial Eemian stage coincides with both the lightest oxygen isotope values of substage 5e and the heavier ones approaching the 5e/5d transition. Accordingly, the Eemian is not equivalent to MI substage 5e, as the Holocene is not equivalent to MIS 1. Remarkably, both pollen and dinocyst data reflect the same climatic pattern on land and ocean, and they evidence a succession of climatic events that the isotope signal does not identify. The Eemian began with a Mediterranean vegetation that was gradually replaced by Eurosiberian formations indicating a change from Mediterranean to oceanic climates. In the middle of the Eemian, warming conditions were interrupted by an event corresponding to a slight cooling resulting from an increase in precipitation over land and ocean. Finally, a warming trend characterised the last phase of the Eemian. The occurrence of small climatic changes during this interglacial is inconsistent with the dramatic variability suggested by the GRIP ice-core record.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Sánchez Goñi, M. F., Turon, J. L., Eynaud, F., Shackleton, N. J., & Cayre, O. (2000). Direct land/sea correlation of the Eemian, and its comparison with the Holocene: A high-resolution palynological record off the Iberian margin. Geologie En Mijnbouw/Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, 79(2–3), 345–354. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0016774600023702

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free