Abstract
Dansgaard-Oeschger oscillations constitute one of the most enigmatic features of the last glacial cycle. Their cold atmospheric phases have been commonly associated with cold sea-surface temperatures and expansion of sea ice in the North Atlantic and adjacent seas. Here, based on dinocyst analyses from the 48-30ĝ€ka interval of four sediment cores from the northern Northeast Atlantic and southern Norwegian Sea, we provide direct and quantitative evidence of a regional paradoxical seesaw pattern: cold Greenland and North Atlantic phases coincide with warmer sea-surface conditions and shorter seasonal sea-ice cover durations in the Norwegian Sea as compared to warm phases. Combined with additional palaeorecords and multi-model hosing simulations, our results suggest that during cold Greenland phases, reduced Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and cold North Atlantic sea-surface conditions were accompanied by the subsurface propagation of warm Atlantic waters that re-emerged in the Nordic Seas and provided moisture towards Greenland summit.
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CITATION STYLE
Wary, M., Eynaud, F., Swingedouw, D., Masson-Delmotte, V., Matthiessen, J., Kissel, C., … Jouzel, J. (2017). Regional seesaw between the North Atlantic and Nordic Seas during the last glacial abrupt climate events. Climate of the Past, 13(6), 729–739. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-13-729-2017
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