Published on 01 January 2007
Summer sea surface temperatures calculated from radiolaria at ODP Site 177-1089 in the subantarctic Atlantic
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A submillennial resolution, radiolarian-based record of summer sea surface temperature (SST) documents the last five glacial to interglacial transitions at the subtropical front, southern Atlantic Ocean. Rapid fluctuations occur both during glacial and interglacial intervals, and sudden cooling episodes at glacial terminations are recurrent. Surface hydrography and global ice volume proxies from the same core suggest that summer SST increases prior to terminations lead global ice-volume decreases by 4.7 ± 3.7 ka (in the eccentricity band), 6.9 ± 2.5 ka (obliquity), and 2.7 ± 0.9 ka (precession). A comparison between SST and benthic delta13C suggests a decoupling in the response of northern subantarctic surface, intermediate, and deep water masses to cold events in the North Atlantic. The matching features between our SST record and the one from core MD97-2120 (southwest Pacific) suggests that the super-regional expression of climatic events is substantially affected by a single climatic agent: the Subtropical Front, amplifier and vehicle for the transfer of climatic change. The direct correlation between warmer DeltaTsite at Vostok and warmer SST at ODP Site 1089 suggests that warmer oceanic/atmospheric conditions imply a more southward placed frontal system, weaker gradients, and therefore stronger Agulhas input to the Atlantic Ocean.
Citations (3)
- https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-025-05297-xDataCite OpenAlex
Cited on 09 June 2025
Weight: 1.97
Cited on 22 June 2015
Weight: 1.73
Cited on 01 December 2007
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Environmental Chemistry
Field
Environmental Science
Domain
Physical Sciences
Confidence Score
99%
Source
Open Alex