Tropical Andean climate variations since the last deglaciation

Author:

Zhao Boyang1ORCID,Russell James M.1,Blaus Ansis2ORCID,Nascimento Majoi de Novaes3,Freeman Aaron1,Bush Mark B.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912

2. Institute for Global Ecology, Florida Institute of Technology, Melbourne, FL 32901

3. Department of Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1098 XH, The Netherlands

Abstract

Global warming during the Last Glacial Termination was interrupted by millennial-scale cool intervals such as the Younger Dryas and the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). Although these events are well characterized at high latitudes, their impacts at low latitudes are less well known. We present high-resolution temperature and hydroclimate records from the tropical Andes spanning the past ~16,800 y using organic geochemical proxies applied to a sediment core from Laguna Llaviucu, Ecuador. Our hydroclimate record aligns with records from the western Amazon and eastern and central Andes and indicates a dominant long-term influence of changing austral summer insolation on the intensity of the South American Summer Monsoon. Our temperature record indicates a ~4 °C warming during the glacial termination, stable temperatures in the early to mid-Holocene, and slight, gradual warming since ~6,000 y ago. Importantly, we observe a ~1.5 °C cold reversal coincident with the ACR. These data document a temperature change pattern during the deglaciation in the tropical Andes that resembles temperatures at high southern latitudes, which are thought to be controlled by radiative forcing from atmospheric greenhouse gases and changes in ocean heat transport by the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference89 articles.

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