ABSTRACT
High resolution paleo-climatological data from IMAGES core MD97-2141
(8.80° N, 121.31° E) located in the Sulu Sea within the western
tropical Pacific reveal the first evidence of continuous millennial-scale
variability in surface ocean conditions over the last 150,000 years. The
millennial-scale planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotope (d18O) oscillations
of Globigerinoides ruber (G. ruber) between 30,000-65,000 years
(MIS3) are apparently in-phase with the Greenland ice core record and have
amplitudes 1/3 to 2/3 the size of the Sulu Sea glacial-interglacial d18O
amplitude of 1.3 %o. In the same interval variations in planktonic foraminiferal
Mg/Ca suggest that millennial-scale sea surface temperature (SST) variations
were small (0.6-1°C) and out-of-phase with d18O indicating that d18O
variability was mainly driven by changes in surface water salinity. This
result implies that the linked East Asian monsoon and the western Pacific
Intertropical Convergence Zones, both influencing the Sulu Sea, have fluctuated
on the same millennial time scale as higher latitude climatic systems.
To further investigate the origin of the MIS3 d18OG.ruber
variations, the relative abundance of all planktonic foraminifer species
and the d18O values of four planktonic foraminifer species was determined
during MIS3. Combined, these data provide a detailed reconstruction of
changes in the western tropical Pacific thermocline structure. The d18O
composition of the mixed-layer foraminifera (G. ruber and Globigerinoides
sacculifer) and upper thermocline species (Neogloboquadrina dutertrei)
displays poor similarity with the d18O of the sub-thermocline dweller Globorotalia
crassaformis. d18OG.crassaformis shows larger d18O
variations (~1 %o) than the surface dwellers indicating past fluctuations
in the influence of high salinity North Pacific Tropical Waters that currently
enter the Sulu Sea across the Mindoro Strait during the months of the winter
monsoon. The faunal and isotopic data suggest a switch from winter to summer
monsoon predominance after 55 kyr. However this predominance is interrupted
by at least three episodes of increased winter monsoon between 42-46 kyr.
Comparison of the proxy SST and planktonic foraminiferal d18O profiles
for the last glacial/interglacial sequence from fourteen cores in tropical
and subtropical oceanic settings indicates that termination I in d18O coincides
with SST change at some sites, while d18O lags SST by 3,000 years at other
locations. A comparison of SST and d18O shows a linear increase in SST
from glacial to interglacial conditions. Sites where SST is leading the
d18O record indicate fresher conditions during the LGM, and these sites
are all located in areas influenced by increased atmospheric water vapor
during times of todays La Nina.
Dannenmann, S., 2001. A multi-proxy study of planktonic foraminifera
to identify past millennial-scale climate variability in the East Asian
Monsoon and the Western Pacific Warm Pool. Unpublished PhD dissertation,
State University of New York at Albany. 165pp., +xii
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE MIC
Film QE 40 Z899 2001 D36
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