Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil

Well-dated high-resolution oxygen isotope records of speleothems in central-eastern Brazil spanning from 1.3 to 10.2 kyr B.P. reveal that the occurrence of abrupt variations in monsoon precipitation is not random. They show a striking match with Bond events and a significant pacing at ∼800 yr, a dom...

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Main Authors: Stríkis, Nicolás M., Cruz, Francisco W., Cheng, Hai, Karmann, Ivo, Edwards, R. Lawrence, Vuille, Mathias, Wang, Xianfeng, de Paula, Marcos S., Novello, Valdir F., Auler, Augusto S.
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Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94835
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8816
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Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-948352020-03-07T12:45:24Z Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil Stríkis, Nicolás M. Cruz, Francisco W. Cheng, Hai Karmann, Ivo Edwards, R. Lawrence Vuille, Mathias Wang, Xianfeng de Paula, Marcos S. Novello, Valdir F. Auler, Augusto S. DRNTU::Science::Geology Well-dated high-resolution oxygen isotope records of speleothems in central-eastern Brazil spanning from 1.3 to 10.2 kyr B.P. reveal that the occurrence of abrupt variations in monsoon precipitation is not random. They show a striking match with Bond events and a significant pacing at ∼800 yr, a dominant periodicity present in sea surface temperature records from both the North Atlantic and equatorial Pacific Oceans that is possibly related to periods of low solar activity (high 14C based on the atmospheric Δ14C record). The precipitation variations over central-eastern Brazil are broadly antiphased with the Asian and Indian Monsoons during Bond events and show marked differences in duration and structure between the early and late Holocene. Our results suggest that these abrupt multicentennial precipitation events are primarily linked to changes in the North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). Anomalous cross-equatorial flow induced by negative AMOC phases may have modulated not only the monsoon in South America but also affected El Niño−like conditions in the tropical Pacific during the Holocene. 2012-10-29T03:55:24Z 2019-12-06T19:03:06Z 2012-10-29T03:55:24Z 2019-12-06T19:03:06Z 2011 2011 Journal Article Strikis, N. M., Cruz, F. W., Cheng, H., Karmann, I., Edwards, R. L., Vuille, M., et al. (2011). Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil. Geology, 39(11), 1075-1078. 0091-7613 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94835 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8816 10.1130/G32098.1 en Geology © 2011 Geological Society of America.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Geology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Geology
Stríkis, Nicolás M.
Cruz, Francisco W.
Cheng, Hai
Karmann, Ivo
Edwards, R. Lawrence
Vuille, Mathias
Wang, Xianfeng
de Paula, Marcos S.
Novello, Valdir F.
Auler, Augusto S.
Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
description Well-dated high-resolution oxygen isotope records of speleothems in central-eastern Brazil spanning from 1.3 to 10.2 kyr B.P. reveal that the occurrence of abrupt variations in monsoon precipitation is not random. They show a striking match with Bond events and a significant pacing at ∼800 yr, a dominant periodicity present in sea surface temperature records from both the North Atlantic and equatorial Pacific Oceans that is possibly related to periods of low solar activity (high 14C based on the atmospheric Δ14C record). The precipitation variations over central-eastern Brazil are broadly antiphased with the Asian and Indian Monsoons during Bond events and show marked differences in duration and structure between the early and late Holocene. Our results suggest that these abrupt multicentennial precipitation events are primarily linked to changes in the North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). Anomalous cross-equatorial flow induced by negative AMOC phases may have modulated not only the monsoon in South America but also affected El Niño−like conditions in the tropical Pacific during the Holocene.
format Article
author Stríkis, Nicolás M.
Cruz, Francisco W.
Cheng, Hai
Karmann, Ivo
Edwards, R. Lawrence
Vuille, Mathias
Wang, Xianfeng
de Paula, Marcos S.
Novello, Valdir F.
Auler, Augusto S.
author_facet Stríkis, Nicolás M.
Cruz, Francisco W.
Cheng, Hai
Karmann, Ivo
Edwards, R. Lawrence
Vuille, Mathias
Wang, Xianfeng
de Paula, Marcos S.
Novello, Valdir F.
Auler, Augusto S.
author_sort Stríkis, Nicolás M.
title Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
title_short Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
title_full Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
title_fullStr Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Abrupt variations in South American monsoon rainfall during the Holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern Brazil
title_sort abrupt variations in south american monsoon rainfall during the holocene based on a speleothem record from central-eastern brazil
publishDate 2012
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94835
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8816
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