Late Pleistocene island weathering and precipitation in the Western Pacific Warm Pool

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Abstract

Deciphering past climate variability in the Western Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP), the Earth’s largest heat and moisture centre, is vital for understanding the global climate system. Nevertheless, its long-term evolution remains controversial, largely due to ambiguities in existing proxy interpretations and discrepancies between records. Here, we present a weathering and erosion reconstruction from the WPWP spanning the last 140,000 years, based on the mineralogy and geochemistry of a sediment core from offshore of northern New Guinea. The paleo-weathering reconstruction is consistent with the simulated precipitation evolution on nearby islands, thereby suggesting a close coupling between climate variability and island weathering in a tropical setting. In addition, our combined data-model interpretation of WPWP climate history shows many similarities to the East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM) variability over orbital timescales. Overall, our study highlights the critical role of precession-paced interhemispheric energy redistribution, via the West Pacific meridional sea-surface pressure gradient, in linking orbital-scale WPWP climate and EASM variability.

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Yu, Z., Ruan, J., Song, L., Yun, K. S., Tang, X., Colin, C., … Wan, S. (2024). Late Pleistocene island weathering and precipitation in the Western Pacific Warm Pool. Npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-024-00642-0

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