Arctic and Antarctic forcing of ocean interior warming during the last deglaciation

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Abstract

Subsurface water masses formed at high latitudes impact the latitudinal distribution of heat in the ocean. Yet uncertainty surrounding the timing of low-latitude warming during the last deglaciation (18–10 ka) means that controls on sub-surface temperature rise remain unclear. Here we present seawater temperature records on a precise common age-scale from East Equatorial Pacific (EEP), Equatorial Atlantic, and Southern Ocean intermediate waters using new Li/Mg records from cold water corals. We find coeval warming in the tropical EEP and Atlantic during Heinrich Stadial 1 (+ 6 °C) that closely resemble warming recorded in Antarctic ice cores, with more modest warming of the Southern Ocean (+ 3 °C). The magnitude and depth of low-latitude ocean warming implies that downward accumulation of heat following Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) slowdown played a key role in heating the ocean interior, with heat advection from southern-sourced intermediate waters playing an additional role.

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Stewart, J. A., Robinson, L. F., Rae, J. W. B., Burke, A., Chen, T., Li, T., … Fornari, D. J. (2023). Arctic and Antarctic forcing of ocean interior warming during the last deglaciation. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-49435-0

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