Enhanced North Pacific subtropical gyre circulation during the late Holocene

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Abstract

The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre circulation redistributes heat from the Western Pacific Warm Pool towards the mid- to high-latitude North Pacific. However, the driving mechanisms of this circulation and how it changed over the Holocene remain poorly understood. Here, we present alkenone-based sea surface temperature reconstructions along the Kuroshio, California and Alaska currents that cover the past ~7,000 years. These and other paleorecords collectively demonstrate a coherent intensification of the boundary currents, and thereby the basin-scale subtropical gyre circulation, since ~3,000–4,000 years ago. Such enhanced circulation during the late Holocene appears to have resulted from a long-term southward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, associated with Holocene ocean cooling. Our results imply that the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre circulation could be weakened under future global warming.

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Zhang, Y., Zheng, X., Kong, D., Yan, H., & Liu, Z. (2021). Enhanced North Pacific subtropical gyre circulation during the late Holocene. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26218-7

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